| Literature DB >> 35378765 |
Erin Close1, Sarah Lumbrezer-Johnson2, Eric Hostnik2, Rhonda Burge1, Ryan Jennings3, Laura Selmic1.
Abstract
A 5-year-old male neutered mixed breed dog and an 8-year-old female spayed golden retriever presented for cervical swelling which was later diagnosed as abscessation of the retropharyngeal lymph node with a malignant round cell tumor and carcinoma with multifocal squamous differentiation, respectively. In veterinary medicine, there is limited published information regarding abscessation of lymph nodes secondary to a neoplastic process. While more common in humans, there are only limited case reports available. Advanced imaging (computed tomography), cytology, surgical excision, and histopathology lead to the final diagnosis. Both dogs underwent surgical extirpation of the lymph nodes and adjuvant chemotherapy protocols. Six weeks postsurgical excision, dog one was euthanized due to quality-of-life concerns. The second dog successfully completed 18 treatments of radiation therapy and was still alive at 388 days postsurgical excision. At the time of manuscript submission, the second dog was doing well clinically.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35378765 PMCID: PMC8976657 DOI: 10.1155/2022/4726370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Vet Med ISSN: 2090-7001
Figure 1Transverse plane CT images of the left medial retropharyngeal lymph node abscesses. Case 1 (a) demonstrates severe lymphadenomegaly, with minimal peripheral contrast enhancement, and multiple intraluminal gas bubbles. Case 2 (b) demonstrates severe lymphadenomegaly, with peripheral contrast enhancement, as well as central septations that had similar contrast enhancement. Both cases have soft tissue stranding in the adjacent soft tissues and cause rightward deviation of the larynx. The contralateral medial retropharyngeal lymph node is labelled with an asterisk (∗). Notice that both medial retropharyngeal lymph nodes are bordered medially by the common carotid (arrowhead) and laterally by the mandibular salivary gland (cranially displaced by the mass in case 2).
Figure 2Histopathology of case 1 (a–c) and case 2 (d–f). In case 1, the neoplastic round cells (a) effaced the lymph node architecture with regions of lytic necrosis (b) associated with bacterial colonies and suppurative inflammation (c). In case 2, the neoplastic epithelial cells (d) effaced the lymph node with large central regions of lytic necrosis € as well as abundant pyogranulomatous inflammation and granulation tissue, elsewhere (f).