Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with pancreatic tumor and low blood sugar treated by laparoscopic
By Mcclaran, Janet Kovak et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2017·From the Animal Medical Center, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Laparoscopic Resection of a Pancreatic β Cell Tumor in a Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-year-old field spaniel was brought in for weakness and low blood sugar levels. Despite multiple ultrasounds failing to find the problem, a special CT scan revealed a small tumor in the pancreas. The dog underwent laparoscopic surgery to remove the tumor, which went smoothly, and the dog's blood sugar levels returned to normal shortly after. Unfortunately, the dog experienced a recurrence of low blood sugar 18 months later and was eventually euthanized 28 months after surgery due to ongoing severe seizures related to the hypoglycemia.
People also search for: dog weakness low blood sugar · field spaniel pancreatic tumor treatment · dog hypoglycemia seizures
Abstract
Laparoscopic partial pancreatectomy has been performed in experimental canine studies and has been evaluated in human medicine but has not been reported in a clinical veterinary case. The authors present a 9 yr old field spaniel with weakness and hypoglycemia with insulin levels and Amended Insulin: Glucose Ratio results equivocal for a pancreatic insulinoma. Multiple abdominal ultrasounds did not detect the tumor, yet dual-phase computed tomographic angiography revealed the presence of a focal hypoattenuating nodule in the left lobe of the pancreas. A 3-port laparoscopic approach to the abdomen confirmed a 1.5-cm mass in the mid-left limb of the pancreas, and resection of the mass was performed with a bipolar vessel-sealing device. The surgery was performed without complication, and the dog became normoglycemic within 4 hr following surgery. Final histopathology results revealed pancreatic neuroendocrine carcinoma of the β cells. Recurrence of hypoglycemia was noted 18 mo postoperatively; however, repeat computed tomographic angiography did not reveal pancreatic abnormalities and fine needle aspirates of liver nodules did not suggest metastatic disease. Medical management was elected and the patient was euthanized 28 mo after surgery due to refractory hypoglycemic seizures.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28892425/