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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog developed eye swelling from salivary cyst after jaw surgery

By Clarke, Ben S & L'Eplattenier, Henry F·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2010·VRCC Veterinary Referrals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Zygomatic salivary mucocoele as a postoperative complication following caudal hemimaxillectomy in a dog.

Species:
dog
Canine GlaucomaMovement & jointsDogs

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old Labrador retriever developed swelling around the eye and bulging of the eyeball after surgery to remove an oral tumor. The dog had a soft tissue sarcoma, and while the initial surgery aimed to control the cancer, it led to a complication called a zygomatic salivary mucocoele, which is a buildup of saliva. The vet performed additional surgery to remove the affected salivary gland, and although there was some improvement, the swelling returned weeks later. Unfortunately, the cancer came back five months later, and the dog was euthanized.

People also search for: dog eye swelling after surgery · Labrador retriever oral tumor treatment · salivary mucocoele in dogs

Abstract

Zygomatic mucocoele is reported as a postoperative complication occurring secondary to a caudal hemimaxillectomy in a two-year-old Labrador retriever. The dog was presented with a history of a rapidly growing oral mass, identified as a soft tissue sarcoma. A caudal hemimaxillectomy via an intraoral approach was performed as treatment for local control of the oral mass. Fifteen days postoperatively, periorbital swelling and exophthalmos developed on the ipsilateral side. The degree of swelling progressed and was identified by computed tomography, ultrasound and cytology as a salivary mucocoele. Zygomatic sialoadenectomy was performed via a modified lateral approach with zygomatic osteotomy. A small amount of discharge persisted from the surgical site but gradually resolved. Recurrence of the periorbital swelling and exophthalmos was noted 25 days later and further surgery was performed to excise residual salivary tissue. Adjuvant radiotherapy was performed, however local recurrence of the oral mass was identified 5 months postoperatively and the patient subsequently euthanased. Salivary mucocoele has been cited as a possible postoperative complication following maxillectomy and mandibulectomy procedures; however to the authors' knowledge, only one previous case report exists in the literature. The current case documents a zygomatic salivary mucocoele occurring subsequent to caudal hemimaxillectomy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20681970/