Hypoglycemia and seizures associated with canine primary hepatic neuroendocrine carcinoma

2021 ◽  
pp. 104063872110123
Author(s):  
Amanda R. Dorn ◽  
Alexandra Brower ◽  
Hailey Turner ◽  
Klayton Lapa

A 10-y-old intact male Labrador Retriever dog had a history of ataxia, inability to stand, and grand mal seizures. Complete blood count and serum biochemistry profiles revealed profound hypoglycemia, mildly increased alanine aminotransferase (ALT) activity, mild hypernatremia, and lymphopenia. The seizures could not be controlled with intravenous dextrose, diazepam, or propofol. The dog was euthanized given poor quality of life, and an autopsy was performed. Primary autopsy findings included firm hepatic masses that ranged from dark-red to tan, with the largest ~1.5 cm diameter, and pulmonary edema. Histologic examination of the hepatic masses revealed redundant, several-cell-thick cords, and packeted or acinar arrangements of polygonal cells, supported on a fibrovascular stroma. The neoplastic cells were immunopositive for insulin, synaptophysin, and neuron-specific enolase immunohistochemistry; granules in the tumor cells had an affinity for Grimelius silver stain. The histologic features, as well as the immunohistochemical staining profile, identified the neoplasm as a primary multifocal hepatic neuroendocrine carcinoma. Neuroendocrine carcinomas are rare in dogs and usually occur in the gastrointestinal or respiratory tract.

2017 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 46
Author(s):  
M. KARAYANNOPOULOU (Μ. ΚΑΡΑΓΙΑΝΝΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ) ◽  
Z. S. POLIZOPOULOU (Ζ.Σ. .ΠΟΛΥΖΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ) ◽  
A. F. KOUTINAS (Α. Φ. ΚΟΥΤΙΝΑΣ) ◽  
M. N. PATSIKAS (Μ.Ν. ΠΑΤΣΙΚΑΣ) ◽  
G. KAZAKOS (Γ. ΚΑΖΑΚΟΣ) ◽  
...  

In this paper a case of periosteal proliferative polyarthritis in an 11-year old, female Siamese cat, that was admitted to the Surgery Clinic of the Veterinary School, A.U.Th., with a 6-month history of non-weight bearing lameness of the left thoracic limb, is described. At physical examination, restricted range of motion of the left elbow joint, local swelling and pain were detected. In the radiological examination of the affected joint the main finding was a periarticular extensive and irregular periosteal new bone formation. The results of the complete blood count and routine serum biochemistry were within normal limits and the cat was serologically negative for FeLV and FIV. Synovial fluid examination showed a lymphoplasmacytic pleocytosis, while the bacterial culture was negative. Prednisolone given at an anti-inflammatory dose for two consecutive weeks resulted in a marked improvement of the clinical sings. However, two months after the end of the treatment lameness reappeared, but this time in the contralateral thoracic limb, due to the involvement of the same joint. Radiology revealed the same type of lesions in the right elbow joint, whereas the left became ankylosed. Again, prednisolone, given at an immunosuppressive dose for two weeks, did not improve but fairly the clinical condition of the animal and the radiological changes as well. For this reason azathioprine at the dose of 1 mg/kg BW, every 48 hours, was added to therapy that lasted for 5 months. Transient mild leukopenia, that resolved after decreasing the dose of azathioprine by 25%, was the only adverse side effect noticed. At the end of the treatment, regression of the radiographical lesions in both elbows enabled the cat to walk with a stilted gait, despite the development of joint ankylosis bilaterally. The disease was kept in remission during the 12-month follow up period.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 205511691878277 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carla Silveira ◽  
Livia Benigni ◽  
Kaye Gugich ◽  
Janet Kovak McClaran

Case summary A 9-year-old male neutered domestic shorthair cat was presented with a 2 day history of anorexia and vomiting. A minimum database, including a complete blood count, serum biochemistry profile and urinalysis were unremarkable apart from a toxic neutrophilic left shift and borderline proteinuria. Abdominal ultrasound revealed intramural gas entrapment with thinning of the gastric wall, a hypoechoic pancreas, peritoneal fluid and a small volume of peritoneal gas along with a hyperechoic mesentery. CT was performed and demonstrated gas within the gastric submucosa and gas in the peritoneal cavity. Generalised gastric erythema was present at surgery and histopathology of excised abnormal areas reported gastric erosion with no obvious causative agents; however, pretreatment with dexamethasone may have been a contributing factor. Culture from biopsied gastric tissue was sterile. Clinical signs resolved after partial gastrectomy and medical management. Relevance and novel information Feline gastric pneumatosis is a rare clinical finding. Imaging is essential for diagnosis and to decide on the appropriate treatment; this is often medical but in cases where there is suspicion or evidence of gastric perforation, surgery is indicated. To our knowledge, this is the first case of feline gastric pneumatosis secondary to gastric ulceration, diagnosed via CT and where dexamethasone may have been a contributing factor.


2011 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 285-289 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Armenise ◽  
Gianfranco Pastorelli ◽  
Angela Palmisano ◽  
Hasan B. Sontas ◽  
Stefano Romagnoli

A 6 yr old pregnant Yorkshire terrier bitch presented 62 days after mating with an acute history of vomiting and coughing. The owners also reported that the dog was polyuric and polydypsic for the last 2 weeks. Complete blood count, serum biochemistry, and urinalysis revealed hyperglycemia, ketonemia, ketonuria, and metabolic acidosis. Diabetic ketoacidosis was diagnosed and after emergency treatment, including fluid therapy, prophylactic antibiotics, and regular insulin, the bitch whelped six healthy normal puppies. Two weeks after treatment, the bitch was clinically normal with normal fructosamine levels. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of gestational diabetes mellitus in a small breed dog.


2021 ◽  
pp. 002367722110185
Author(s):  
Brian J Smith ◽  
Patrick W Hanley ◽  
Ousmane Maiga ◽  
Maarit N Culbert ◽  
Marissa J Woods ◽  
...  

Complete blood count, serum chemistry values, and biological reference intervals were compared between two age groups (34–49 and 84–120 days old) of healthy male and female laboratory raised natal multimammate mice ( Mastomys natalensis). Blood was collected via cardiocentesis under isoflurane anesthesia. Data sets of machine automated complete blood counts and clinical chemistries were analyzed. Significant differences between sex and age groups of the data sets were defined. The baseline hematologic and serum biochemistry values described here can improve interpretation of laboratory research using natal multimammate mice.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1098612X2110137
Author(s):  
James R Templeman ◽  
Kylie Hogan ◽  
Alexandra Blanchard ◽  
Christopher PF Marinangeli ◽  
Alexandra Camara ◽  
...  

Objectives The objective of this study was to verify the safety of policosanol supplementation for domestic cats. The effects of raw and encapsulated policosanol were compared with positive (L-carnitine) and negative (no supplementation) controls on outcomes of complete blood count, serum biochemistry, energy expenditure, respiratory quotient and physical activity in healthy young adult cats. Methods The study was a replicated 4 × 4 complete Latin square design. Eight cats (four castrated males, four spayed females; mean age 3.0 ± 1.0 years; mean weight 4.36 ± 1.08 kg; mean body condition score 5.4 ± 1.4) were blocked by sex and body weight then randomized to treatment groups: raw policosanol (10 mg/kg body weight), encapsulated policosanol (50 mg/kg body weight), L-carnitine (200 mg/kg body weight) or no supplementation. Treatments were supplemented to a basal diet for 28 days with a 1-week washout between periods. Food was distributed equally between two offerings to ensure complete supplement consumption (first offering) and measure consumption time (second offering). Blood collection (lipid profile, complete blood count, serum biochemistry) and indirect calorimetry (energy expenditure, respiratory quotient) were conducted at days 0, 14 and 28 of each period. Activity monitors were worn 7 days prior to indirect calorimetry and blood collection. Data were analyzed using a repeated measures mixed model (SAS, v.9.4). Results Food intake and body weight were similar among treatments. There was no effect of treatment on lipid profile, serum biochemistry, activity, energy expenditure or respiratory quotient ( P >0.05); however, time to consume a second meal was greatest in cats fed raw policosanol ( P <0.05). Conclusions and relevance These data suggest that policosanol is safe for feline consumption. Further studies with cats demonstrating cardiometabolic risk factors are warranted to confirm whether policosanol therapy is an efficacious treatment for hyperlipidemia and obesity.


2021 ◽  
pp. 17-18
Author(s):  
Tejasvini Chandra ◽  
Perwez Khan ◽  
Lubna Khan ◽  
Anshika Gupta

We report bilateral proptosis as the initial presentation of Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) in a child. An Eight year child presented with a history of painless proptosis in the both eyes within 10 days. Radiological investigation (CT scan) showed inltration of orbit with the metastatic tumour cell. AML was diagnosed with complete blood count, General Blood Picture (GBP) and bone marrow biopsy. The presumptive diagnosis of leukemic inltration of the orbit is made. We report this case as AML can rarely present in child as a bilateral proptosis due to leukemic inltration. Urgent treatment modality for this rare condition is radiation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Sylvester Luu ◽  
Brian C. Benson ◽  
Kelly A. Haeusler ◽  
Robert O. Brady ◽  
Katherine M. Cebe ◽  
...  

A 60-year-old male with prior history of laryngeal carcinoma and active smoking presented with six months of solid food dysphagia. Endoscopy showed a large, friable gastroesophageal junction mass. Biopsies revealed a high-grade, poorlydifferentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma. He was subsequently started on platinum based chemotherapy and radiation therapy and his tumor decreased dramatically in size. This case is unique as neuroendocrine carcinomas (NECs) are rarely found in the esophagus and usually have a poor prognosis at time of diagnosis.


2017 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 105
Author(s):  
N. DIAKAKIS (Ν.ΔΙΑΚΑΚΗΣ)

Enterolithiasis is characterized by the presence of enteroliths in the large colon of horses with the ascending colon being the most common site of obstruction. Enteroliths are composed of ammonium magnesium phosphate, which is supplied both by the digestive processes intestinal bacteria and by feeds. The enteroliths typically form around a central nidus. Although enterolithiasis is seen all over the world, the most cases are reported from North America, and more specifically, California, South West Indiana and Florida. As far as breed is concerned, it affects predominantly Arab horses and rarely Quarter and Thoroughbreds. As far as age is concerned, it is usually seen in middle-aged horses. Although the pathogenesis of enterolithiasis is not fully understood, nutrition and heritability are believed to be a part in it. A rich diet in ammonium, magnesium and phosphorus predisposes to enterolith formation, as those elements are the main components of enteroliths. Clinical signs vary considerably and are rarely characteristic of the disease. Usually, the presence of the enterolith is free of symptoms unless it leads to obstruction. In most cases of enterolithiasis a small amount of faeces, air and the administered mineral oil could pass from the obstruction site. On the contrary, in complete obstructions the passage is closed, defecation is absent and no laxative can pass the obstruction site. The enterolith is rarely found by rectal examination. A history of recurrent colic might be connected to the presence of enteroliths that cause partial or temporary obstruction. The most accurate method for diagnosing enterolithiasis is abdominal radiography. The treatment of choice is the surgical removal of enteroliths, which has a favorable prognosis provided that the laparotomy is going to take place early in course of the disease, before the onset of peritonitis. Intestinal rupture, which rapidly leads to peritonitis, is the gravest and commonest complication. Other complications are colitis, leakage through the laparotomy site and peritonitis. In order to prevent reformation of enteroliths, the daily consumption of alfalfa hay has to be reduced dramatically and poor quality hay has to be administered.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Halana Do Carmo Silva ◽  
Avisa Rodrigues De Oliveira ◽  
Rodrigo Dos Santos Horta ◽  
Betânia Souza Moereira ◽  
Tatiany Luiza Silveira ◽  
...  

Background: Malignant myoepithelioma is a rare neoplasm in humans and rats, poorly reported in dogs and not previously described in rabbits. This study aimed to report a case of malignant mammary myoepithelioma in a domestic rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus). Case: A domestic, hybrid, female, entire, nulliparous, seven-year-old rabbit was attended in the Veterinary Hospital Prof. Ricardo Alexandre Hippler at Universidade Vila Velha (UVV) with a history of apathy, lethargy and anorexia. In the clinical examination a 5 cm tumour was observed in the right abdominal mammary gland (M2), along with floating smaller lesions in M1 and M3. There were no palpable abnormalities in the axillary and inguinal lymph nodes. Complete blood count and serum biochemistry were within the normal range. Fine needle aspiration was performed for cytopathological evaluation of the tumour in M2 and it was suggestive of a malignant glandular neoplasm, with probable epithelial origin. Complete staging included chest and abdominal radiographs, but they were unremarkable. The patient was submitted to a right unilateral mastectomy, involving resection of the inguinal lymph node. The sample was sent to the Laboratory of Animal Pathology of UVV for routine histological evaluation. Histopathological evaluation in M2 was compatible with malignant myoepithelioma based on the literature, while nodules in M1 and M3 were classified as mammary cysts. The inguinal lymph node showed no significant abnormalities. An immunohistochemical panel was performed in the Comparative Pathology Laboratory of the Institute of Biological Sciences of the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG), using immunomarkers (pan-cytokeratin, p63 and vimentin) to characterize the tumour and confirm its diagnosis. Immunohistochemistry revealed expression of p63, and was negative for pan-cytokeratin and vimentin, which confirmed the myoepithelial origin, without involvement of the epithelial compartment. Clinical follow-up was recommended every 2-3 months, including abdominal ultrasonography, chest X-rays, complete blood count and serum biochemistry. Ultrasonography showed thinning of the uterine wall, dilation of 3.7 cm in diameter and presence of endometrial cysts of varied sizes, around 0.7 cm. Neutering was recommended but it was not elected by the pet´s responsible. These findings remained stable throughout the follow-up, which was greater than 405 days.Discussion: This is the first report of a malignant myoepithelioma in rabbit, with a detailed description of the clinical, surgical, pathological and immunophenotypic aspects of this neoplasm in this species. This is a tumour characterized by proliferation of epithelioid to spindle-like myoepithelial cells, as observed in this case, forming an extensive and well delimited solid area with marked central necrosis, compatible with what has already been described in the literature on bitches and women. As observed in this case, the neoplastic cells usually exhibit moderate cellular and nuclear pleomorphism, moderate anisocytosis and anisokaryosis, and several mitotic figures; different from what is observed in women, in which mitotic figures vary from small to moderate amount. Neoplasia and mammary cysts were removed by mastectomy, and the owner choose not to castrate the animal. On ultrasonography, after 12 months, the endometrium presented structures similar to cysts and was hyperplastic, which is commonly reported in association to mammary neoplasia. Nervertheless, the pet´s owner choose not to spay the rabbit and the lesions were stable on imaging follow-up


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 5841-5841
Author(s):  
Jose Angel Hawing ◽  
Olga Graciela Cantu Rodriguez ◽  
Andrés Gómez-De León ◽  
Consuelo Mancias ◽  
Luz del Carmen Tarín Arzaga ◽  
...  

Bone marrow (BM) aspiration plays an important role in hematologic malignancies diagnosis. Access and cost of diagnostic flow cytometry remains a problem in low and middle-income countries. In this context, morphological diagnosis by BM smear often represents the only means to rapidly diagnose our patients. Therefore, in this context obtaining the highest quality sample possible during the procedure is paramount. Despite being a well-known problem, evidence-based recommendations to improve BM aspirate quality are few, with studies evaluating factors associated with poor quality samples lacking. Objectives To determine factors associated with poor quality BM aspirates defined by an aspicular or hemodiluted sample in a hematology referral center. Materials and methods We conducted a retrospective study in our University Hospital and analyzed the BM smear samples stored in our center performed from October 2014 to December 2018. We collected and analyzed data based on diagnosis, age, gender, recent chemotherapy, and the variables of a complete blood count performed just before each BM aspiration. The quality of the BM smear was defined in any of the following: aspicular (without spicules), pauciaspicular (1-3 spicules), spicular (> 3 spicules), defining aspicular BM smear as non-diagnostic samples. Univariate analysis was performed looking for diferences between operators (in a 3-year residency program). In the other hand, in the multivariate analysis we seek to reveal the factors associated with obtaining hemodiluted (aspicular) bone marrow aspirate-smears. Results A total of 1,073 BM aspirates were evaluated. Hematology fellows performed 97% of BM aspirates; the remaining 3% were performed by attending physicians. In our analysis, 301 aspirates were aspicular, constituting 28.1% of the total number of aspirate smears. Most BM aspirates were performed for a diagnostic evaluation (66.3%) with the rest of the procedures for subsequent hematologic malignancy response assessments. In the univariate analysis, no differences were observed between operators. In a multivariate analysis the presence of an age >65 years (OR 3.1, 95% CI 2.3 to 4.1) and hemoglobin <6.0 g/dL (OR 2.7, 95% CI 1.4 to 4.5) at the time of the procedure were significantly associated to obtaining a non-diagnostic sample. Diagnosis, WBC count, platelet count, operator experience or other variables did not show statistical relevance. In our center, 18.81% of diagnostic patient samples that had acute leukemia were diagnosed without flow cytometry and through BM aspirate morphology alone. A second procedure to reach a diagnosis was necessary in 7.97% of the patients due to aspicular samples, obtaining a mean of diagnostic-treatment delay of 18.3 days (±5.7 days). Conclusions We found no differences between operators, emphasizing that there are other factors to consider in addition to a correct BM aspiration technique or operator experience. We believe this is crucial to recognize, especially in developing countries where morphological diagnosis remains the only means for the diagnosis or response evaluation of our patients. BM aspirate sample quality is multifactorial, being age and hemoglobin important factors. In addition, obtaining aspicular or hemodiluted samples represents not only a diagnostic challenge, but also delays the treatment of our patients. Disclosures Gomez-Almaguer: Celgene: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Takeda: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Teva: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Amgen: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau; Janssen: Consultancy, Speakers Bureau.


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