| Literature DB >> 24196087 |
Lucy Va Metcalfe1, Peter J O'Brien, Stratos Papakonstantinou, Stephen D Cahalan, Hester McAllister, Vivienne E Duggan.
Abstract
A 15 year-old grey Thoroughbred gelding presented for investigation of chronic weight loss and recent onset of respiratory difficulty. Clinical examination confirmed tachypnoea with increased respiratory effort. Thoracic ultrasound examination detected pleural effusion. The dyspnoea was related to the large volume of pleural effusion and, following post-mortem examination, to the presence of a large mediastinal mass. Multiple pigmented masses, likely melanomas, were detected peri-anally. Thoracic radiography, cytological examination of the pleural fluid and a fine needle aspirate of a thoracic mass led to a presumptive diagnosis of malignant melanoma and this was confirmed at post mortem examination. Further metastatic spread to the central nervous system and right guttural pouch was also identified. In conclusion this case manifests the potential malignant behaviour of equine melanomas, and a review of proposed therapies for melanoma treatment highlights the therapeutic options and current areas of research.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24196087 PMCID: PMC4226278 DOI: 10.1186/2046-0481-66-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ir Vet J ISSN: 0368-0762 Impact factor: 2.146
Figure 1Lateral radiograph of the left mid-dorsal thorax. A well-marginated soft tissue opacity is visible ventral to and superimposed on the thoracic vertebrae, extending from intercostal spaces 6-13.
Figure 2Cytospin preparation of pleural fluid showing pigmented vacuolated cells, likely melanophages (arrows).
Figure 3Fine needle aspirate smear. There are multiple cytological criteria of malignancy: anisokaryosis (black arrow), nuclear moulding (red arrow).