2014
DOI: 10.1111/vcp.12210
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What is your diagnosis? Fluid aspirated from an abdominal mass in a dog

Abstract: A 4-year-old female spayed Boxer dog was presented to a veterinary hospital in southern Ontario for an annual health visit. The dog had been clinically well and the owner reported no concerns. On routine physical exam, palpation disclosed a large mass in the abdomen. Radiographs showed the mass to be approximately 25 9 20 cm, and located mostly in the cranial abdomen. Ultrasound of the mass confirmed radiographic size and location, and indicated that the mass appeared to be multilobulated and fluid filled. A C… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Material was gained from hepatic parenchyma (n=5), intralesional fluid (n=7) and/or free peritoneal fluid (n=2). Findings were consistent with AE in 10 dogs, based on the presence of acellular larval wall fragments and calcareous corpuscles (Oscos-Snowball and others 2015). In two dogs, cytology of parenchymal hepatic samples was not suggestive of AE, revealing only pyogranulomatous inflammation in one case and considered non-diagnostic due to poor cellularity in the other case.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 55%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Material was gained from hepatic parenchyma (n=5), intralesional fluid (n=7) and/or free peritoneal fluid (n=2). Findings were consistent with AE in 10 dogs, based on the presence of acellular larval wall fragments and calcareous corpuscles (Oscos-Snowball and others 2015). In two dogs, cytology of parenchymal hepatic samples was not suggestive of AE, revealing only pyogranulomatous inflammation in one case and considered non-diagnostic due to poor cellularity in the other case.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 55%
“…Dogs were included if they had a positive serology against E. multilocularis Em2-antigen (Staebler and others 2006) and/or a positive E. multilocularis -specific PCR (Diebold-Berger and others 1997) and/or a positive microscopic identification on cytology or histopathology (Oscos-Snowball and others 2015). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although uncommon, cases of hepatic metacestode infections in domestic dogs have been described in Switzerland (Haller et al, 1998 ;Scharf et al, 2004;Heier et al, 2007;Pezelet et al, 2013;Gendron et al, 2015), Germany (Geisel et al, 1990;Gwada et al, 2018), Belgium (Caron et al, 2017), Slovakia (Antolova et al, 2018), and Canada (Peregrine et al, 2012;Oscos-Snowball et al, 2015). In dogs, in which alveolar echinococcosis develop within the abdominal cavity (Geigy et al, 2013;Oscos-Snowball et al, 2015;Gwada et al, 2018), the most common clinical features include progressive abdominal enlargement, intermittent inappetence and vomiting. Imaging modalities are important steps in the diagnosis of alveolar echinococcosis, with abdominal radiography and ultrasonography being most commonly reported, while abdominal CT has only been described in two cases (Scharf et al, 2004;Gendron et al, 2015).…”
Section: Medical Management Of Echinococcus Multilocularis Infection mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous cases of alveolar echinococcosis highlighted the cytologic features of metacestode membranes from a liver cyst and an abdominal effusion in dogs infected with echinococcosis . Of interest in this case were the E multilocularis metacestode protoscolices in cytologic preparations of the dog's liver cyst.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Identification of species can be achieved by assessing the metacestode ultrastructure on histologic sections, by measuring protoscolex hooks, and by performing PCR to detect parasite DNA on cytologic or tissue samples [4][5][6]. Previous cases of alveolar echinococcosis highlighted the cytologic features of metacestode membranes from a liver cyst and an abdominal effusion in dogs infected with echinococcosis 7,8. Of interest in this case were the E multilocularis metacestode protoscolices in cytologic preparations of the dog's liver cyst.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%