RESUMO
This case report describes 2 dogs, an Appenzeller Mountain dog and an Irish Wolfhound, with angioleiomyoma within the nasal cavity. Endoscopic surgical resection resulted in cure in both dogs. Macroscopically and on diagnostic imaging, tumor masses may appear malignant because of local turbinate destruction. This highlights the importance of histological examination before any recommendations are made to owners because tumors of the nasal cavity may be benign and surgery curative.
Assuntos
Angiomioma , Doenças do Cão , Neoplasias Nasais , Cães , Animais , Doenças do Cão/cirurgia , Doenças do Cão/diagnóstico , Doenças do Cão/patologia , Doenças do Cão/diagnóstico por imagem , Angiomioma/veterinária , Angiomioma/cirurgia , Angiomioma/patologia , Angiomioma/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Nasais/veterinária , Neoplasias Nasais/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Nasais/cirurgia , Neoplasias Nasais/patologia , Neoplasias Nasais/diagnóstico por imagem , Masculino , Feminino , Cavidade Nasal/patologia , Cavidade Nasal/cirurgia , Cavidade Nasal/diagnóstico por imagem , Endoscopia/veterináriaRESUMO
The present report describes a novel etiological agent of cutaneous leishmaniasis in horses that, at least for some cases, sporadically appeared as autochthonous infections in geographically distant regions of Germany and Switzerland. The infection was initially diagnosed upon clinical and immunohistological findings. Subsequent comparative sequence analysis of diagnostic PCR products from the internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1) of ssrRNA classified the respective isolates as neither Old World nor New World Leishmania species. However, four isolates subjected to molecular analyses all exhibited a close phylogenetic relationship to Leishmania sp. siamensis, an organism recently identified in a visceral leishmaniasis patient from Thailand. Future investigations will demonstrate if this form of leishmaniasis represents an emerging, and perhaps zoonotic, disease of European, or even global, importance.