A 2-year-7-month-old female intact African hedgehog was presented with a subcutaneous mass around the right side of the neck as well as an intra-abdominal mass found during palpation. Surgical excision and exploratory laparotomy were performed. A uterine mass was identified during laparotomy and ovariohysterectomy was performed. The botryoid mass measured [Formula: see text][Formula: see text]cm and was located in the right uterine horn. It had a meat-like texture and was yellow-white and dark red in color. The removed subcutaneous mass measured [Formula: see text][Formula: see text]cm. The mass was well-encapsulated and had a yellow-white homogeneous texture on the cut surface. Histologically, the myometrium was invaded by neoplastic cells and the tissue boundaries were not obvious. Neoplastic cells were arranged in a whirling or intersecting pattern, with strong angiogenesis present. Vacuolated nuclei were round and oval to cigar shaped, with one to multiple nucleoli present. Immunohistochemistry revealed a positive reaction for CD10, but a negative reaction for smooth muscle actin (SMA) and desmin in the uterine neoplastic cells. Histologically, well-differentiated adipocytes with sheets of undifferentiated polygonal neoplastic cells, which were characterized by vacuolated nuclei with prominent multiple nucleoli, were found in the subcutaneous mass. Neoplastic cells of the subcutaneous mass were positively stained with antibodies of MDM2 and estrogen receptor (ER), but failed to give a positive result for vimentin because the cross-species interaction was insufficient. The definitive diagnosis was endometrial stromal sarcoma and liposarcoma in an African hedgehog.
A five-year-old female cockatiel weighing 117 g was presented with a fast-growing mass beside the uropygial gland. Excisional biopsy was performed and the mass measured [Formula: see text][Formula: see text]cm in size and weighed 30.6 g. On the surface of cut sections, the mass was yellow-brown with white or yellow colloidal substances and red exudate. Histopathology showed that the tumor mass was covered by the skin and located in the deep dermis and hypodermis. The tumor consisted of abundant vascular adipose tissue and lipoblasts with intracytoplasmic lipid droplets, which varied in size. Also, small, well-differentiated blood vessels, with varied degrees of congestion and dilation, were observed within the tumor. Histochemically, staining with Oil red O produced a positive reaction in which the lipid droplets presented a reddish color. Immunohistochemistry produced positive staining for Desmin and successfully marked the muscular layers of blood vessels. On the basis of these results, a rare case of liposarcoma with microvascular proliferation adjacent to the uropygial gland was diagnosed in a cockatiel.
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