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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Teat sinus and duct growths in small breed dogs

By Schulman, F Yvonne et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2022·Zoetis Reference Labs, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Teat sinus and duct adenomatous hyperplasia in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Ten small breed dogs were found to have abnormal growths in their teats, known as teat sinus and duct adenomatous hyperplasia. These growths varied in appearance, being pink to black and sometimes crusted, and could affect multiple teats. Fortunately, all eight dogs that were monitored after treatment remained healthy with no significant changes or new growths for up to 22 months. This condition is benign, meaning it is not cancerous, and does not seem to cause serious health issues.

People also search for: dog teat growths · small breed dog teat problems · adenomatous hyperplasia in dogs · dog teat lesions treatment

Abstract

Seventeen lesions diagnosed as teat sinus and duct adenomatous hyperplasia were identified in 10 dogs. All of the dogs were small breeds. Six were spayed female and 4 were male, 3 castrated and 1 intact. In 5 cases, the lesions involved multiple teats. They were pink to black, flattened to round, and sometimes crusted. Histologically, the lesions were usually pigmented (16/17), plaque-like to nodular masses composed of polygonal cells arranged in anastomosing trabeculae and bilayered ducts and/or cysts, with a fibrous to mucinous (Alcian blue-positive) stroma and squamous cysts (12/17). Scattered epithelial cells contained single, discrete, clear cytoplasmic vacuoles. Atypia was mild, and the mitotic count per 2.37 mmvaried from 0 to 15 (average 2.7). Immunohistochemistry was performed on 14 of the lesions from 8 dogs. Epithelial cells were 100% panCK+ and included basally located CK14+/CK5_6+/p63+/calponin- cells and nonbasal CK19+/CK7+ cells. Cells manifesting squamous differentiation were usually panCK+/CK14+/CK5_6+/CK19-/CK7-/p63±/calponin-. In addition to fibroblasts, vimentin positivity was found in disseminated, round to stellate stromal and intraepithelial cells that often had black, granular, cytoplasmic pigment (consistent with dendritic/phagocytic cells and/or melanocytes). Of the 8 dogs for which clinical follow-up information was available, all were still alive and well, with no significant teat changes, development of mammary lesions or other masses 4 to 22 months (median 12.5) after biopsy. The histologic, immunohistochemical, and clinical findings were consistent with teat duct and sinus adenomatous hyperplasia. This is an uncommon, benign proliferative lesion that can involve multiple teats of female and male, small breed dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34794347/