Abstract

In veterinary medicine, abdominal ultrasonography is used to rank the differential diagnosis of renal lesions. However, a conventional sonographic examination may show nonspecific findings. The purpose of this study was to assess the computed tomography (CT) findings of canine renal tumors, including renal cell carcinoma (RCC), lymphoma, and hemangiosarcoma (HSA). In this retrospective study, the following CT parameters were recorded for each dog: 1) extent of renal involvement of tumors, 2) enhancement pattern, 3) number of renal tumors, 4) renal tumor vessel enhancement in the corticomedullary phase, 5) presence of lymphadenopathy and lung metastasis, and 6) attenuation values of the renal tumors on the pre- and post-contrast corticomedullary, nephrographic, and excretory phase images. Fifteen dogs met the inclusion criteria, of which nine had RCCs, four had lymphomas, and two had HSAs. RCCs tended to show heterogeneous enhancement and unilateral renal involvement, and vessel enhancement was detected in the corticomedullary phase in dogs with RCC. Conversely, renal lymphomas showed homogeneous enhancement, bilateral renal involvement, and multiple masses; in these dogs, no vessel enhancement was detected in the corticomedullary phase, and the incidence of lymphadenopathy was low. However, in dogs with lymphadenopathy, the renal lymphoma was associated with regionally severe lymphadenopathy. Finally, renal HSAs tended to show heterogeneous enhancement with a non-enhanced area and unilateral renal involvement; in these dogs, vessel enhancement was detected in the nephrographic phase, with the enhancement expanding around the vessel. These findings had no significant differences. Further studies with a larger sample size are required to examine the association between CT and histopathological findings.

Highlights

  • In dogs, primary renal tumors are rare and account for only 0.6–1.7% of all reported neoplasms [1]

  • In canine primary renal neoplasms, 85% of the cases are of epithelial origin, including renal cell carcinoma (RCC), transitional cell carcinoma, adenoma, and papilloma; 11% of the cases are of lymphoma and mesenchymal origin, including, hemangioma, leiomyoma, fibroma, lipoma, and malignant counterparts; 4% of the cases are mixed tumors [2,3,4]

  • All renal tumors were diagnosed as RCC (n = 9, 60%), lymphoma (n = 4, 27%), or HSA (n = 2, 13%) through cytology or histopathology

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Primary renal tumors are rare and account for only 0.6–1.7% of all reported neoplasms [1]. In canine primary renal neoplasms, 85% of the cases are of epithelial origin, including renal cell carcinoma (RCC), transitional cell carcinoma, adenoma, and papilloma; 11% of the cases are of lymphoma and mesenchymal origin, including, hemangioma, leiomyoma, fibroma, lipoma, and malignant counterparts; 4% of the cases are mixed (nephroblastic) tumors [2,3,4]. There are four distinct types of renal tumors, including tumors of a tubular, transitional cell, nephroblastic, or nonepithelial origin [4]. Fine needle aspiration (FNA) or biopsy is required for the diagnosis of renal lesions [5]. Several biopsy techniques for the diagnosis of renal lesions have been reported [6]. The procedure is cheap, safe, and easy to perform [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call