| Literature DB >> 29426352 |
Hock Gan Heng1, Chee Kin Lim2, Sarah Steinbach1, Meaghan Maureen Broman3, Margaret Allan Miller3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ultrasonographic appearance of unorganized hyperechoic striations (UHS) has been observed in the canine gastric muscularis layer. The purpose of the study was to determine the prevalence, sonographic and postmortem histologic features, and to determine the clinical significance of canine gastric muscularis UHS. In the prospective study, 72 dogs were included. The presence of gastric muscularis UHS were reviewed to determine its distribution and location. In the retrospective study, 167 dogs that had both abdominal ultrasonography and necropsy were included.Entities:
Keywords: Canine; Fibrosis; Gastric muscularis layer; Ultrasonography; Unorganized hyperechoic striations
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29426352 PMCID: PMC5807825 DOI: 10.1186/s13028-018-0365-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Scand ISSN: 0044-605X Impact factor: 1.695
Fig. 1Sagittal ultrasonographic image of the stomach of a dog from the prospective study. The unorganized hyperechoic striations (UHS) are seen in the gastric muscularis layer (between the asterisks). This dog had no clinical sign related to the gastrointestinal tract
Fig. 2Transverse ultrasonographic images of one dog with the gastric muscularis UHS from the prospective study. The gastric muscularis UHS were subtle and appeared to be linear and parallel to the serosa when the stomach was relaxed (a) but were more prominent when the stomach was contracted (b)
Dogs with gastric muscularis unorganized hyperechoic striations and their respective clinical and histopathological findings
| Animal | Signalment | Clinical signs related to GIT disease | Primary disease process | Histopathology stomach |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dog 1 | 5 years FS Welsh Corgi | No | Immune-mediated thrombocytopenia | Light patchy (microscopic) mucosal and submucosal hemorrhage; no hemorrhage in muscularis layer |
| Dog 2 | 7 years FS Bulldog | Vomiting, hematemesis | Probable immune-mediated thrombocytopenia, DIC, septicemia | Diffuse light submucosal hemorrhage; patchy muscularis hemorrhage (light) and mainly along plexus and extending perivascular into inner and outer layers |
| Dog 3 | 15 years MN Yorkshire Terrier | Inappetance, melena | Transitional cell carcinoma, cholangio-hepatitis | Mucosal layer has accentuated deep follicles, but more diffuse lymphoplasmocytic superficial lamina proprial infiltration; parietal cells with swollen hypochromatic nucleus and cytoplasmic pseudoinclusion; cut perpendicular so looks different, but impression is increased mature fibrous tissue through tunica muscularis and serosa |
| Dog 4 | 8.5 years MN mixed breed dog | No | Glomerulopathy, cerebral infarcts | Normal mucosal layer; submucosal small arteries, arterioles, and veins have pale amphophilic homogeneous mural deposition (vasculopathy); surrounding fibrous tissue has pale basophilic coarse globular/stippling; inner layer muscularis has areas with drop-out of myofibers |
| Dog 5 | 8 years MN Chow Chow | Vomiting (medication related) | Hepatocellular necrosis with liver dysfunction, portal vein thrombosis | Normal mucosa/submucosa layers; increased fibrous tissue in muscularis; perivascular fatty infiltration in muscularis |
| Dog 6 | 15 years MN Beagle | Vomiting, diarrhea, anorexia | Acute kidney injury, primary hyperparathyroidism, and multiple neoplastic disease processes (transitional cell carcinoma, hepatocellular adenoma, mantle cell lymphoma, thyroid mass). Ruptured hepatic adenoma with hemoabdomen | No abnormal histopathologic findings |
| Dog 7 | 10.5 years FS Australian Shepherd | Weight loss | Spinal meningioma, chronic kidney disease and eosinophilic enteritis | No abnormal histopathologic findings |
| Dog 8 | 9 years MN Yorkshire Terrier | Weight loss | Renal tubular dysfunction, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis with interstitial nephritis | Small portion of the outer layer of tunica muscularis has atrophied bundles); myenteric plexus and ganglia present; space between inner and outer layers expanded by edematous fibrous tissue with dilated lymphatics; submucosa and mucosa layer with mineralization of vessels and basement membrane; fibrin thrombi in mucosal venules (azotemia) |
| Dog 9 | 10 years FS Labrador Retriever | Vomiting | Hepatocellular adenoma, pulmonary and renal amyloidosis | No tissue |
FS female spayed, MN male neutered
Fig. 3Transverse ultrasonographic image of a dog’s stomach (a) and corresponding histologic section with Masson’s trichrome stain (b) from the retrospective study. The gastric muscularis UHS were more prominent in the contracted portion of the stomach where the muscularis was thicker. In the histologic section, the fibrous tissue (blue) in the thicker part of the muscularis is mostly perivascular (see insertion at the right bottom corner), whereas in the thinner part, the blue-stained fibrous tissue is in the muscularis interstitium parallel to the muscle fibers and to the serosal surface (top). The double-headed arrow spans the muscularis. M gastric mucosa, SM gastric submucosa