A 9.5-year-old, neutered male, large crossbreed dog presented with unspecific clinical signs of lethargy, vomiting, anorexia and polydipsia. CT and blood analyses were consistent with liver lobe torsion with secondary disseminated intravascular coagulation causing renal and myocardial infarction and pulmonary thromboembolism. To the authors’ knowledge, this is the first case of a suspected liver lobe torsion displaying a ‘whirl sign’ and also the first CT description of a presumed myocardial infarction in a dog.
Objectives To determine the diagnostic accuracy of ultrasonography in the detection of lymphomatous infiltration of the liver and spleen in a population of dogs and cats with lymphoma. To determine if specific ultrasonographic features of the liver and spleen in dogs are associated with lymphomatous infiltration or a specific immunophenotype of multi‐centric lymphoma. Materials and Methods A blinded retrospective evaluation of ultrasonographic images of the liver and/or spleen in dogs and cats with cytologically or histologically confirmed lymphoma was performed by two board‐certified veterinary radiologists. Results A total of 161 animals met the inclusion criteria, comprising 132 dogs and 29 cats. Ultrasonography had a sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of 16.7%, 91.0%, 55.9%, 62.5% and 55.0% for the detection of lymphomatous infiltration of the liver, and 73.1%, 93.9%, 82.6%, 93.4% and 74.7% for the spleen. In dogs, an ultrasonographically normal liver was associated with not having lymphomatous infiltration, leopard‐spotted splenic parenchyma and splenomegaly were independently associated with lymphomatous infiltration and leopard‐spotted splenic parenchyma was also associated with the B cell immunophenotype of multi‐centric lymphoma. Clinical Significance Ultrasonography of the spleen and liver is specific but not sensitive in the detection of lymphomatous infiltration. A leopard‐spotted splenic parenchyma in dogs is highly specific for lymphomatous infiltration and in this population predicted a specific immunophenotype of multi‐centric lymphoma.
To describe computed tomographic (CT) findings in dogs diagnosed with aspiration pneumonia and to assess for any correlation with patient outcome.Materials and MethOds: Retrospective analysis of 38 cases with a presumptive diagnosis of aspiration pneumonia at two UK referral centres. Medical records were reviewed for signalment, history, physical examination and clinicopathologic data. CT examinations of the thorax were reviewed by the European College of Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging board-certified radiologist for all dogs to describe the characteristics and distribution of the pulmonary lesions. results:The most common CT findings were lung lobe consolidation associated with air bronchograms (100%) followed by ground-glass attenuation (89.4%), bronchial wall thickening (36.8%), bronchiolectasis (31.5%) and bronchiectasis (15.7%). Large-breed dogs were overrepresented. Duration of hospitalisation ranged between 0 and 8 days (mean 3 days). Overall, 89.4% of dogs survived the aspiration event and were discharged from the hospital. The four dogs that did not survive to discharge had five or more lobes affected on CT. clinical significance: CT findings in dogs with aspiration pneumonia are described. CT is a useful imaging modality to diagnose aspiration pneumonia.
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