| CASE PRESENTATIONAn 11-year-old, neutered male, Labradoodle was presented to the University of Florida's Small Animal Hospital for restaging of a meibomian gland carcinoma removed from his right inferior eyelid 3 years prior. On presentation, the dog had multiple masses throughout the body, including several subcutaneous lipomas and a cutaneous keratin-filled lesion between the ears, which were diagnosed by fine-needle aspiration and cytologic evaluation. A CBC and chemistry profile revealed a mild normocytic normochromic anemia (packed cell volume [PCV] 37%, reference interval [RI] 40-56; mean corpuscular volume [MCV] 69.2 fL, RI 64.0-74.0; mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC) 34.3, RI 33.0-38.0) and a moderately increased ALT activity (303 U/L, RI 18.0-64.0). A triple-phase helical computed tomography (CT) of the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis was performed for metastasis screening. A welldefined, heterogeneous, fat-and fluid-attenuating, bilobed mass was found within the left ventral peritoneal space, between the greater curvature of the stomach and the spleen, and ventral to the transverse colon. The mass measured approximately 12.0 × 6.5 × 6.5 cm (L × H × W) and was characterized by a soft tissue, contrast-enhancing capsule, a large, fluid-filled, non-contrast enhancing, irregularly margined central component, and multiple linear hyperattenuating striations within the fat-attenuating, non-contrast enhancing periphery (Figure 1). Multiple, hyperattenuating striations were seen within the peritoneal fat surrounding the mass. A fine-needle aspirate was submitted for cytologic evaluation (Figure 2).