Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Overweight female dogs are especially prone to developing these tumors, and most older or overweight dogs have at least one lipoma. [46] [47] In dogs, lipomas usually occur in the trunk or upper limbs. [45] They are also found less commonly in cattle and horses, and rarely in cats and pigs.
Immune therapy based on cultivation of tumor tissue is being developed for dogs. [22] A preventive vaccine based on several proteins commonly found in dog cancers, including hemangiosarcomas, is also being developed. [23] In the skin, it can be cured in most cases with complete surgical removal as long as there is not visceral involvement. [4]
Dercum's disease — A rare condition characterized by painful fatty tumors in the adipose tissue commonly associated with obesity. Familial lipodystrophies - Multiple rare genetic syndromes characterized by loss of adipose tissue in certain areas of the body, which often cause Endocrine diseases .
Dog with atopic dermatitis, with signs around the eye created by rubbing. Atopy is a hereditary [3] and chronic (lifelong) allergic skin disease. Signs usually begin between 6 months and 3 years of age, with some breeds of dog, such as the golden retriever, showing signs at an earlier age.
These tumors can develop on the skin, subcutaneously, or on a blood vessel within an organ and are highly malignant. The tumors are most fatal when they rupture, causing the dog to suffer from severe loss of blood, or hypovolemia. [6] Dogs are one of three mammalian species that are known to suffer from a transmissible cancer. [7]
Squamous cell carcinoma* is a malignant tumor in dogs that most commonly occurs in the oral cavity, including the tongue, tonsils, and gingiva. Squamous cell carcinoma accounts for 5 percent of skin tumors in dogs, and are the most common tumor of the toe. Dogs with unpigmented skin on the nose may develop this cancer from long-term sun exposure.
A mastocytoma in dogs (or mast cell tumor in dogs) is a neoplasm originating from mast cells in the domestic dog, which occurs mainly in the skin and subcutis. Mastocytoma are not only extremely common in dogs, but also tend to be much more malignant in them than in other animal species.
These other tumors along with some of their distinguishing histopathologic features are: 1) dysplastic lipomas (i.e. benign humors that have sites of tissue necrosis and neoplastic, variably-sized fat cells containing variable sized/shaped nuclei; these neoplastic cells, unlike most neoplastic cell in the liposarcomas, do not overexpress the ...