Nakaichi Munekazu, Itamoto Takuya, Nemoto Yuki, Sunahara Hiroshi, Itoh Harumichi, Itamoto Kazuhito, Tani Kenji
Department of Veterinary Radiology, Joint Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Yamaguchi University, Yamaguchi, Japan.
Department of Veterinary Small Animal Clinical Science, Joint Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Yamaguchi University, Yamaguchi, Japan.
JFMS Open Rep. 2023 Sep 28;9(2):20551169231188642. doi: 10.1177/20551169231188642. eCollection 2023 Jul-Dec.
A 10-year-old male neutered Abyssinian cat was presented with the chief complaint of a right pharyngeal mass. On palpation, the mass was easily palpable; it appeared well demarcated and mobile, and oval in shape. Radiographic examination showed a radiopaque pharyngeal mass, which was revealed to be a well-demarcated mass lesion with a radiopaque marginal area on CT examination. The inside of the mass was uniformly well enhanced on contrast CT examination. A three-dimensional image reconstructed from the CT images strongly suggested that the mass originated from the right stylohyoid bone. No abnormal lesions were observed in the thoracic and abdominal CT examinations. Surgical excision of the mass was scheduled 3 weeks after the first admission. The mass was bluntly separated from the surrounding musculature and resected together with the ipsilateral epihyoid bone adjacent to the mass. Histopathological examination of the resected mass showed neoplastic cells with osteoid formation, and the mass was histopathologically diagnosed as an osteosarcoma. The postoperative recovery from anaesthesia was uneventful, and the cat began feeding on its own from the third postoperative day. The 3-month postoperative CT evaluation revealed no local recurrence or distant metastasis. The cat showed no abnormal findings at the time of writing (6 months postoperatively).
Although osteosarcoma derived from the hyoid bone has rarely been reported in the veterinary field, this report suggests that such tumours may occur in cats. In addition, partial excision of the hyoid apparatus seems to be well tolerated in cats.
一只10岁已绝育的阿比西尼亚公猫因右侧咽部肿块为主诉前来就诊。触诊时,肿块很容易摸到;它界限清楚、可活动,呈椭圆形。影像学检查显示咽部有一个不透射线的肿块,CT检查显示这是一个界限清楚的肿块性病变,边缘区域不透射线。增强CT检查时肿块内部均匀强化良好。从CT图像重建的三维图像强烈提示肿块起源于右侧舌骨。胸部和腹部CT检查未观察到异常病变。计划在首次入院3周后对肿块进行手术切除。将肿块与周围肌肉组织钝性分离,并与肿块相邻的同侧舌骨上肌群一起切除。对切除肿块的组织病理学检查显示肿瘤细胞有类骨质形成,该肿块经组织病理学诊断为骨肉瘤。术后麻醉恢复顺利,猫从术后第三天开始自行进食。术后3个月的CT评估显示无局部复发或远处转移。在撰写本文时(术后6个月),这只猫未出现异常情况。
尽管兽医领域很少报道源自舌骨的骨肉瘤,但本报告表明此类肿瘤可能发生在猫身上。此外,猫似乎对舌骨装置的部分切除耐受性良好。