1 / 11

Beau

Beau. A case report. Signalment:. 11 year old Male Castrated Border collie. History.

bertha-guy
Download Presentation

Beau

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Beau A case report

  2. Signalment: • 11 year old • Male Castrated • Border collie

  3. History • 12/29/06 referring veterinarian noticed lymphadnopathy. Blood work was unremarkable and the urinalysis showed RBCs. He was placed on deramaxx for arthritis (per owners Beau was slowing down) and doxycycline. • 1/8/07 Beau was not improving. Along with the lymphadnopathy he now had bruising on his abdomen. Lymph node biopsies : only showed lymphoid hyperplasia and panniculitis. Coag panel was normal although his platelet numbers had dropped from 314,000 to 171,000. Deramaxx was stopped. • Beau continued to decline and was referred to NCSU-CVM 2/21/07.

  4. PE • Temp: 103.6 • BCS: 4/9 • Diffuse marked lymphadenopathy

  5. CBC • Normocytic normochromic nonregenerative anemia • Lymphopenia • Monocytopenia

  6. Lymph node aspirate • > 50% Lymphoblast • Multinucleated lymph cells

  7. Thoracic radiographs • Sternal and tracheobronchial lymphomegaly

  8. Ultrasound • Infiltrative splenic disease

  9. Ultrasound • Diffuse lymphadenopathy

  10. Stages of Lymphoma • Stage I: Only one lymph node involved. • Stage II: Regional LNs, limited to one side of diaphragm • Stage III: All peripheral LNs • Stage IV: All peripheral LNs plus spleen, liver, and/or anterior mediastinum. • Stage V: Everything in stage IV plus bone marrow involvement.

  11. Staging Lymphoma • The stage of the disease does not impact the response to chemotherapy. • So stage II may not have a better prognosis than stage IV. • The exception is stage V which has a poor response to chemotherapy.

More Related