Tumors occur in all domestic and wild animals. They are most often diagnosed
in dogs and cats, and their numbers increase from year to year. In the recent
years, cancer is believed to be the most frequent cause of pet deaths. A
speedy and reliable diagnosis is of paramount importance because it enables
the veterinarian to begin therapy and make a prognosis. The objective of an
early diagnosis is to enable the detection of neoplastic diseases before the
tumor spreads throughout the organism, consequently enabling the timely
administration of therapy and providing greater chances for curing the
animal. A tumor is diagnosed on the grounds of the anamnesis, clinical
picture, and special diagnostic procedures. The most frequently applied
diagnostic procedures are laboratory diagnostics, cytology, biopsy and
pathohistology, imaging diagnostics (roentgenography and roentgenoscopy,
ultrasound diagnostics, endoscopy, computer tomography, magnetic resonance,
and scintigraphy) and molecular diagnostics. Each of these methods has its
advantages and faults in connection with costs, availability, sensitivity,
specificity and quality of anatomic vs functional pictures. Every one of
these techniques has its own field of implementation and each one provides
different and additional information in connection with the nature and
position of the primary lesion and the presence of metastases