Short Communication
Papillary ovarian cystadenocarcinoma in a dog : clinical communication
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association | Vol 76, No 1 | a394 |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/jsava.v76i1.394
| © 2005 S. Yotov, R. Simeonov, F. Dimitrov, N. Vassilev, M. Dimitrov, P. Georgiev
| This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 12 June 2005 | Published: 12 June 2005
Submitted: 12 June 2005 | Published: 12 June 2005
About the author(s)
S. Yotov,R. Simeonov,
F. Dimitrov,
N. Vassilev,
M. Dimitrov,
P. Georgiev,
Full Text:
PDF (432KB)Abstract
An 11-year-old female German Shepherd dog was presented for investigation of progressive enlargement of the abdomen, periodic bloody discharge from the vulva and rapid exhaustion. Transabdominal ultrasonography and lateral abdominal radiography demonstrated an echogenic formation with anechogenic cavities located cranial to the urinary bladder and a homogeneous shadow with an elliptical shape was located caudal to the rib arc. Both showed indistinct borders. Exploratory laparotomy identified bilateral ovarian masses and ovariohysterectomy was performed. Histopathology confirmed ovarian cystadenocarcinoma. The dog remained clinically normal without evidence of metastatic disease 4 months after surgery. Papillary cystadenocarcinoma in the bitch could affect both ovaries and manifests with a rapid growth rate and clinical signs such as rapid exhaustion, abdominal enlargement and vulval discharge. Ovariohysterectomy is the treatment option.
Keywords
Bitch; Diagnosis; Ovarian Tumour; Treatment
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