Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Laparoscopic surgery to remove insulin tumors in older female dogs
By Keulen, Justin N P & van Nimwegen, Sebastiaan A·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2023·Department of Clinical Sciences of Companion Animals, Netherlands·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Laparoscopic partial pancreatectomy through an advanced lateral approach as treatment for insulinoma in dogs: a case series.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of four older female dogs, including a Wire-haired Dachshund, German Shepherd, Jack Russell Terrier, and Boxer, were brought in for weakness, tremors, and seizures. They were diagnosed with insulinoma, a type of pancreatic tumor, after tests showed low blood sugar levels. A new minimally invasive surgery technique was used to remove part of their pancreas, and all dogs recovered well, with normal blood sugar levels after surgery. Most of the dogs remained healthy for a long time after the procedure, although one dog experienced a recurrence of symptoms later on.
People also search for: dog insulinoma symptoms · surgery for dog pancreatic tumor · dog seizures treatment · low blood sugar in dogs · recovery after dog pancreas surgery
Abstract
A minimally invasive partial pancreatectomy was performed through a novel laparoscopic lateral flank approach in sternal-oblique recumbency in four clinical cases presented with an insulinoma. All four cases were female castrated dogs of older age (range 7-9 years) and different breeds (Wire haired dachshund, German shepherd, Jack Russel terrier, and Boxer), and all presented with episodic weakness, tremors, and/or seizures. The diagnosis was based on plasma glucose level below reference range with concomitant increased or normal insulin level. A laparoscopic approach was considered based on triple-phase contrast-enhanced computed tomography findings of the abdomen, revealing a pancreatic mass situated in the right pancreatic limb or left pancreatic limb without suspicion of metastasis. Laparoscopic procedures were performed without any major complications, and peri-operative glycemia increased to (supra-)normal levels in all cases. Histopathologic reports qualified the masses as neuroendocrine carcinomas, and in conjunction with the clinical picture, this neoplasia was further defined as insulinoma. Post-operative care in an intensive care unit was of short duration, and all animals were discharged being clinically normal and normoglycemic in between 1.5 and 2.5-day post-surgery. At short-term follow-up, no dogs showed clinical abnormalities, all recovered well from the surgical procedure, and blood glucose levels remained in the normal range. During long-term follow-up, 2 cases remained clinically normal at the time of writing, 564 and 1,211 days after surgery, 1 dog had recurrence of hypoglycemic episodes after 246 days and was euthanized after 673 days of surgery due to progressing disease, and 1 dog was euthanized after 1,028 days of surgery due to reasons unrelated to the insulinoma. Survival times ranged from 599 to 1,232 days after diagnosis. Considering the highly metastatic nature and difficulty of full laparoscopic staging of insulinoma patients, thorough pre-operative disease staging is warranted when considering a laparoscopic approach. This case series shows the feasibility of a novel laparoscopic flank approach for right and left partial pancreatectomy in dogs. Furthermore, proper case selection resulted in favorable outcome in these insulinoma patients.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38260191/