Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with multiple bile duct growths causing a liver mass
By Rachel Naghi et al.·Published in Veterinary Medicine and Science·2023·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences College of Veterinary Medicine University of Florida Gainesville Florida, GB·View original on DOAJ →
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Original publication title: Multiple biliary duct hamartomas in a cat resulting in a hepatic mass: A case report
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 13-year-old male neutered domestic short-haired cat was brought in for surgery due to a suspected liver tumor. After removing the mass, the vet found it was actually multiple biliary duct hamartomas, which are non-cancerous growths. The cat recovered well, and follow-up ultrasounds three months later showed no signs of the condition returning.
People also search for: cat liver mass surgery · cat biliary duct hamartomas · cat liver tumor recovery
Abstract
Abstract A 13‐year‐old, male neutered domestic short‐haired cat was diagnosed with multiple biliary duct hamartomas after liver lobectomy for a suspected malignant hepatic mass. Distinguishing ultrasonographic findings included a lobular, mostly well‐defined, heterogeneous, predominantly hyperechoic, left hepatic mass. Computed tomography (CT) confirmed the presence of a lobular, well‐defined, fluid to soft tissue attenuating, heterogeneously hypoenhancing left divisional hepatic mass. Grossly, a large left sided multilobular pale pink gelatinous hepatic mass was surgically excised. Histopathologically, the mass was composed of irregular cystic spaces lined by cuboidal epithelium and separated by mature regular fibrous tissue. Three months following surgery there was no evidence of recurrence or progression of disease on repeat abdominal ultrasound (AUS).
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Search related cases →Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.1002/vms3.1175