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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Using triple-phase CT scans to identify liver lesions in dogs

By Ladislav Stehlík et al.·Published in Animals·2020·Small Animal Clinic, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno, Palackého tř. 1946/1, 61242 Brno, Czech Republic, CH·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Triple-Phase Multidetector Computed Tomography in Distinguishing Canine Hepatic Lesions

Species:
dog
Canine hemangiosarcomaStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs with liver lesions underwent advanced imaging tests to help determine if their conditions were benign or malignant. The tests showed that while some lesions appeared different from healthy liver tissue, there was no clear way to tell which lesions were cancerous just from the scans. In particular, a type of cancer called hemangiosarcoma showed specific patterns, but overall, the imaging could not reliably distinguish between the different types of liver problems. As a result, the researchers concluded that a biopsy is needed for a definitive diagnosis.

People also search for: dog liver lesions treatment · canine hemangiosarcoma symptoms · liver biopsy for dogs

Abstract

The liver has a unique vascular supply, and triple-phase contrast-enhanced computed tomography examinations are being performed in order to characterize liver lesions. This study aimed to look for any associations between the attenuation values of liver lesions and their histological classification. The inclusion criteria for this retrospective study were focal or multifocal liver lesions and histological diagnosis. All of the dogs underwent pre-contrast and triple-phase postcontrast computed tomography (CT) examinations with identical timings of the postcontrast series. Thirty-one dogs were included in the study, and various benign and malignant pathologies were identified. The results did not identify any significant differences between the benign and malignant liver lesions, nor between the individual histological diagnoses. Inflammatory lesions were significantly different compared to the normal liver parenchyma, and significant hypoattenuation was found in the portal and delayed venous phases. Hemangiosarcomas were significantly hypoattenuating to the normal liver parenchyma in the pre-contrast and arterial phases, and also to all of the benign lesions in the arterial phase. The other pathologies showed variable attenuation patterns in the different postcontrast phases, and differentiation was not possible. On the basis of this study, triple-phase contrast-enhanced computed tomography cannot differentiate between benign and malignant liver lesions, and biopsy and further histological analysis are necessary.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.3390/ani11010011