Granulocytic sarcoma is a malignant extramedullary solid tumor, composed of granulocytic precursor cells at various
levels of differentiation. Three differentiation levels are considered: blastic, immature, and differentiated, and cases
with unusual morphology. Nowadays the aid of more and more highly developed techniques allows to differentiate the
various histotypes.
We report a case of a 5 year-old female Schnautzer dog, died after a serious dyspnoea. During the autopsy the
veterinary found several neoplasias in the lungs. It has been found a very large white-greyish mediastinal neoplasia,
stuck at the trachea and several more in the parenchyma. Several samples were fixed in formalin, embedded in paraffin
and exposed to histochemistry staining (H.E., Giemsa), cytochemistry (Naphthol-AS-D-Chloroacetate), and
immunohistochemistry (anti-CD3, -CD79a, -CD45, -MPO, -CD45Ro, -CD34, -CD20, -CD68, -CD15, -CD30, -CD117,
-CD235a, -Factor VIII, -elastase and anti-Pan-cytocheratine).
Neoplasia, poorly circumscribed, was composed by a large number of neutrophil granulocytes with different degrees of
differentiation, including elements of myeloid lineage.
Cells were positive to MPO and focal to Naphtol-As-D-Chloroacetate and were negative to all the others antisera,
allowing us to exclude lymphomas, small cells carcinomas, and tumors of monocytic and erythroid origin. By these
characteristics we could diagnose a rare case of neutrophilic granulocytic sarcoma, of immature type progressing to
mature form