Genre
- Journal Article
Case records of 11 dogs with histologically confirmed carotid body tumors were reviewed. Surgical excision had been attempted in ten dogs with carotid body tumors, and one dog had been euthanatized at diagnosis. There were no intraoperative deaths but perioperative mortality was 40%. Horner's syndrome and laryngeal paralysis were the most common postoperative morbidities. The median survival time after surgery alone in the four dogs that survived the perioperative period was 25.5 months (range, 12-45 months). Two dogs treated with postoperative radiation therapy had survival times of 6 and 27 months. Of the six dogs surviving the perioperative period, two dogs are still alive at 19 and 32 months postoperatively. Of the four dogs that died, one was euthanatized 12 months postoperatively for nontumor-related causes. The remaining three dogs died of distant metastases. The carotid body tumors studied were characterized by local tissue invasion, neurovascular complications after therapy, and a propensity to metastasize to multiple sites in the body.
Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins 80523.
UNITED STATES
LR: 20061115; PUBM: Print; GR: 1-PO1-CA29582/CA/NCI; JID: 8708660; ppublish
Source type: Electronic(1)
Language
- English
Subjects
- animals
- Treatment Outcome
- Male
- Dogs
- Carotid Body Tumor/diagnosis/therapy/veterinary
- Biopsy, Needle/veterinary
- Postoperative Complications/veterinary
- Retrospective Studies
- Dog Diseases/diagnosis/surgery
- Female