41 research outputs found

    Ectopic ossification presenting as osteoid metaplasia in a salivary mucocele in a Shih Tzu dog

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Salivary mucocele is an accumulation of saliva in a single or multiloculated cavity lined by connective tissue that is contiguous to a salivary gland-duct complex and is the most common condition affecting the salivary glands in dogs. Occasionally, different types of metaplastic lesions, such as squamous and osseous metaplasia - which are rare lesions in animals - can be observed in association with salivary mucocele.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>A right facial enlargement was suddenly observed in a 4-year-old non-spayed female Shih-Tzu dog. The lesion presented itself as a soft and fluctuant mass located in the right side of the face near to the neck. Histologically, the mass consisted of a cavitary formation without an epithelial lining. Additionally, microscopic examination revealed the presence of osteoid-producing cells which gave rise to areas of bone formation, probably induced by irritation due to the presence sialoliths. Such cells and bone formations were also present in the cavity wall, consequently leading us to classify the condition as a salivary mucocele with osseous metaplasia.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>In the present case, the pathogenesis was probably associated with the presence of sialoliths, which can behave as etiological agents for the metaplastic lesion. The occurrence of osteoid metaplasia is a rare peculiar condition in the canine salivar y gland, and due to the rarity and lack of information about this specific disease, no clinical data can yet be associated with the development of salivary mucocele with osseous metaplasia in dogs.</p

    Extramedullary hematopoiesis in a case of benign mixed mammary tumor in a female dog: cytological and histopathological assessment

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Backgroud</p> <p>Extramedullary hematopoiesis (EMH) is defined as the presence of hematopoietic stem cells such as erythroid and myeloid lineage plus megakaryocytes in extramedullary sites like liver, spleen and lymph nodes and is usually associated with either bone marrow or hematological disorders. Mammary EMH is a rare condition either in human and veterinary medicine and can be associated with benign mixed mammary tumors, similarly to that described in this case.</p> <p>Case presentation</p> <p>Hematopoietic stem cells were found in a benign mixed mammary tumor of a 7-year-old female mongrel dog that presents a nodule in the left inguinal mammary gland. The patient did not have any hematological abnormalities. Cytological evaluation demonstrated two distinct cell populations, composed of either epithelial or mesenchymal cells, sometimes associated with a fibrillar acidophilic matrix, apart from megakaryocytes, osteoclasts, metarubricytes, prorubricytes, rubricytes, rubriblasts, promyelocytes, myeloblasts. Histological examination confirmed the presence of an active hematopoietic bone marrow within the bone tissue of a benign mammary mixed tumor.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>EMH is a rare condition described in veterinary medicine that can be associated with mammary mixed tumors. It's detection can be associated with several neoplastic and non-neoplastic mammary lesions, i.e. osteosarcomas, mixed tumors and bone metaplasia.</p

    Malignant mammary tumor in female dogs: environmental contaminants

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    Mammary tumors of female dogs have greatly increased in recent years, thus demanding rapid diagnosis and effective treatment in order to determine the animal survival. There is considerable scientific interest in the possible role of environmental contaminants in the etiology of mammary tumors, specifically in relation to synthetic chemical substances released into the environment to which living beings are either directly or indirectly exposed. In this study, the presence of pyrethroid insecticide was observed in adjacent adipose tissue of canine mammary tumor. High Precision Liquid Chromatography - HPLC was adapted to detect and identify environmental contaminants in adipose tissue adjacent to malignant mammary tumor in nine female dogs, without predilection for breed or age. After surgery, masses were carefully examined for malignant neoplastic lesions. Five grams of adipose tissue adjacent to the tumor were collected to detect of environmental contaminants. The identified pyrethroids were allethrin, cyhalothrin, cypermethrin, deltamethrin and tetramethrin, with a contamination level of 33.3%. Histopathology demonstrated six female dogs (66.7%) as having complex carcinoma and three (33.3%) with simple carcinoma. From these tumors, seven (77.8%) presented aggressiveness degree III and two (22.2%) degree I. Five tumors were positive for estrogen receptors in immunohistochemical analysis. The contamination level was observed in more aggressive tumors. This was the first report in which the level of environmental contaminants could be detected in adipose tissue of female dogs with malignant mammary tumor, by HPLC. Results suggest the possible involvement of pyrethroid in the canine mammary tumor carcinogenesis. Hence, the dog may be used as a sentinel animal for human breast cancer, since human beings share the same environment and basically have the same eating habits

    Cell block sensitivity for immunohistochemical detection of cytokeratin 5, oestrogen and progesterone receptors in canine primary mammary carcinoma

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    Mammary carcinomas are relatively common ailments among female canines aged around 10 years old, presentingan important morbidity with an average survival of five years. The cytoinclusion technique is frequently employed in human medicine as the investigative method of choice as it quickly provides resources for the determination of the correct therapeutic response, however, the effectiveness of the technique in canines remains understudied in veterinary medicine. This study aims at evaluating the degree of correlation with immunohistochemical marking for cytokeratin 5 (CK5), oestrogen and progesterone receptors (ER and PR) between the cytoinclusion and the histopathology technique in mammary carcinomas. Twenty-five samples of mammary carcinoma, both for the cytoinclusion and histopathological techniques were submitted for histological processing; microscope slides were created for hematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining and the immunohistochemical technique (IHC) was assessed for the ER, PR and CK5 receptors. Through the HE staining, we reached a concordance rate of 100% between the cytoinclusion and the histopathological analysis in the diagnosis of carcinomas. The immunohistochemical assay presented sensitivity of 85.71%, 95.45% and 100% and Cohen’s kappa of 0.78, 0.84 and 0.95 for ER, PR and CK5, respectively, as well as 100% specificity and P&lt;0.01 for all three markers. Therefore, cytoinclusion represents an accessible, fast and low-cost method, offering high sensitivity for the cytomorphological and immunohistochemical diagnosis of mammary carcinoma in female canines

    Absence of promoting potential of bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum) in rat urinary bladder carcinogenesis induced by N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl)-nitrosamine and uracil

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    Conventional studies on bracken fern (Pteridium aquilinum; PA) carcinogenicity have used high dietary concentrations (around 30%) and long-term exposure (up to 52-70 weeks) without consideration of the multistep character of the chemical carcinogenesis process. The present study evaluated specifically the promoting potential of 3-5% dietary crude PA in the rat urinary bladder mucosa in a 32-week-long initiation-promotion assay for chemical carcinogenesis. Initiation of urothelial carcinogenesis was accomplished with N-butyl-N-(4-hydroxybutyl)-nitrosamine (BBN). Uracil (U) was provided through the diet in order to expand the population of initiated cells. Seven groups (C) of male Wistar rats were submitted to the following treatments: G1 = BBN (n = 8); G2 = U (n = 10); G3 = BBN-U (n = 9); G4 = BBN-PA-U-PA (n = 16); G5 = PA (n = 8); G6 = BBN-PA (n = 10); G7 = PA-U-PA (n = 12). At the end of the experiment rats presenting epithelial papillary or nodular hyperplasia (PNH), papillomas (PAP), or simultaneous PNH plus PAP numbered, respectively G1: 2-0-1; G2: 0-0-0; G3: 3-0-2; G4: 4-3-2; G5: 1-0-1; G6: 8-0-0; and G7: 0-0-0, with no significant differences in the incidence of lesions among the groups. More frequent and more severe lesions occurred in BBN-initiated animals, predominantly in those also exposed to uracil (G3 and G4). Low-dose crude bracken fern in the diet does not promote rat urinary bladder carcinogenesis after a 32-week period of exposure, even when the initiated urothelial cell population has been expanded through a mechanical stimulus. (C) 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc

    Adenocarcinoma of the parotid salivary gland in a cow

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    A 6-year-old Girolando dairy cow was presented for evaluation of a large subcutaneous facial mass. Fine-needle aspirates of the mass contained many neoplastic cells with high nuclear:cytoplasmic ratios arranged in sheets and loosely cohesive clusters with streaming erythrocytes and neutrophils in the background. Neoplastic cells were 1325 mu m in diameter and were round to cuboidal with variably distinct borders. Based on the signalment, anatomic location, and cytologic findings, differential diagnoses included salivary adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and mucoepidermoid carcinoma. The cow was euthanized and a necropsy was performed. The primary neoplasm arose from the left parotid salivary gland and meastatic tumor was found in the regional lymph nodes and lung. Histologically, the tumor was composed of anastomosing and irregular solid islets surrounded by scant stroma. Cells were negative for periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), PAS-diastase, and Alcian blue pH 2.5 stains, used to detect mucin. on immunohistochemical analysis, neoplastic luminal salivary gland cells expressed cytokeratin, but not S100, a-smooth muscle actin, or vimentin. Peripheral cells of neoplastic islets were immunoreactive for p63. The final diagnosis was nonsecretory adenocarcinoma of the parotid salivary gland.Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP

    Spontaneous canine transmissible venereal tumor: association between different phenotypes and the insertion LINE-1/c-myc Tumor venéreo transmisible canino espontáneo: asociación entre diferentes fenotipos y la inserción LINE -1/c-myc Tumor venéreo transmissível canino espontâneo: associação entre diferentes fenótipos e a inserção LINE-1/c-myc

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    Objective: this study aimed to evaluate the LINE-1 transposon inserted in c-myc gene as a specific genetic alteration in cells of spontaneous canine Transmissible Venereal Tumor (TVT) with either lymphocytoid or plasmacytoid phenotypes. Methods: tumoral biopsies from 35 dogs were collected by puncture or exfoliation. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) was carried out with primers myc.s and LINE. A, specific to the LINE-1 segment to detect the presence of LINE-1/c-myc molecular marker. Results: sequence alignment of DNA samples from lymphocytoid and plasmacytoid TVT cells did not show polymorphisms, and the comparison with sequences from the GenBank identified them as a LINE-1/c-myc rearrangement. Conclusions: considering the aggressive nature of the plasmacytoid phenotype, there is no apparent relation between LINE-1/c-myc and the malignancy of TVT. Further studies are needed to establish molecular differences associated with the aggressiveness of the various phenotypes of canine TVT.Objetivo: evaluar la expresión del trasposón LINE-1 insertado en el oncogén c-myc como una alteración genética específica en células de Tumor Venéreo Transmisible canino espontáneo con fenotipos linfocitoideos o plasmocitoideos. Métodos: se tomaron muestras citológicas de 35 caninos naturalmente afectados por Tumor Venéreo Transmisible (TVT), separándolas en dos grupos de acuerdo al fenotipo predominante. La identificación del marcador molecular LINE-1/c-myc fue posible mediante la técnica de Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa (PCR) usando los primers myc.s y LINE. A, específicos para el segmento LINE-1. Resultados: el resultado del alineamiento de las secuencias obtenidas a partir del DNA de cada uno de los fenotipos de TVT no presentó variación entre ellos y al compararlas con el alineamiento de otras secuencias depositadas en el GenBank, pudo observarse que se trata de un reordenamiento LINE- 1/c-myc. Conclusiones: teniendo en cuenta la naturaleza agresiva del fenotipo plasmocitoide, se estableció que no hay polimorfismo genético entre los grupos analizados, siendo necesario realizar nuevos estudios tendientes a establecer diferencias moleculares asociadas con la agresividad de los diferentes fenotipos del TVT canino.Objetivo: foi avaliado o elemento de transposição LINE-1 inserido no gene c-myc como alteração genética específica nas células do TVT espontâneo canino nos grupos fenotípicos previamente classificados como linfocitóide e plasmocitóide. Métodos: amostras da lesão de 35 cães foram colhidas por punção ou esfoliação. Para identificar o marcador molecular LINE-1/c-myc nas amostras foi utilizada a técnica de Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase empregando-se os primers myc.s e LINE. A, específicos para o segmento LINE-1. Resultados: o resultado do alinhamento das sequências obtidas das amostras de DNA das células de TVT linfocitóide e plasmocitóide não apresentou polimorfismos e, por meio do alinhamento com outras sequências depositadas no GeneBank, identificou-se que trata-se do rearranjo LINE-1/c-myc. Conclusões: parece não haver relação entre este aspecto molecular analisado com a agressividade do tumor

    Spontaneous canine transmissible venereal tumor: association between different phenotypes and the insertion LINE-1/c-myc

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    Objective: this study aimed to evaluate the LINE-1 transposon inserted in c-myc gene as a specific genetic alteration in cells of spontaneous canine Transmissible Venereal Tumor (TVT) with either lymphocytoid or plasmacytoid phenotypes. Methods: tumoral biopsies from 35 dogs were collected by puncture or exfoliation. Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) was carried out with primers myc.s and LINE. A, specific to the LINE-1 segment to detect the presence of LINE-1/c-myc molecular marker. Results: sequence alignment of DNA samples from lymphocytoid and plasmacytoid TVT cells did not show polymorphisms, and the comparison with sequences from the GenBank identified them as a LINE-1/c-myc rearrangement. Conclusions: considering the aggressive nature of the plasmacytoid phenotype, there is no apparent relation between LINE-1/c-myc and the malignancy of TVT. Further studies are needed to establish molecular differences associated with the aggressiveness of the various phenotypes of canine TVT.Objetivo: foi avaliado o elemento de transposição LINE-1 inserido no gene c-myc como alteração genética específica nas células do TVT espontâneo canino nos grupos fenotípicos previamente classificados como linfocitóide e plasmocitóide. Métodos: amostras da lesão de 35 cães foram colhidas por punção ou esfoliação. Para identificar o marcador molecular LINE-1/c-myc nas amostras foi utilizada a técnica de Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase empregando-se os primers myc.s e LINE. A, específicos para o segmento LINE-1. Resultados: o resultado do alinhamento das sequências obtidas das amostras de DNA das células de TVT linfocitóide e plasmocitóide não apresentou polimorfismos e, por meio do alinhamento com outras sequências depositadas no GeneBank, identificou-se que trata-se do rearranjo LINE-1/c-myc. Conclusões: parece não haver relação entre este aspecto molecular analisado com a agressividade do tumor.Objetivo: evaluar la expresión del trasposón LINE-1 insertado en el oncogén c-myc como una alteración genética específica en células de Tumor Venéreo Transmisible canino espontáneo con fenotipos linfocitoideos o plasmocitoideos. Métodos: se tomaron muestras citológicas de 35 caninos naturalmente afectados por Tumor Venéreo Transmisible (TVT), separándolas en dos grupos de acuerdo al fenotipo predominante. La identificación del marcador molecular LINE-1/c-myc fue posible mediante la técnica de Reacción en Cadena de la Polimerasa (PCR) usando los primers myc.s y LINE. A, específicos para el segmento LINE-1. Resultados: el resultado del alineamiento de las secuencias obtenidas a partir del DNA de cada uno de los fenotipos de TVT no presentó variación entre ellos y al compararlas con el alineamiento de otras secuencias depositadas en el GenBank, pudo observarse que se trata de un reordenamiento LINE- 1/c-myc. Conclusiones: teniendo en cuenta la naturaleza agresiva del fenotipo plasmocitoide, se estableció que no hay polimorfismo genético entre los grupos analizados, siendo necesario realizar nuevos estudios tendientes a establecer diferencias moleculares asociadas con la agresividad de los diferentes fenotipos del TVT canino
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