A retrospective study of salivary gland diseases in 179 dogs (2010-2018).

J Vet Diagn Invest

Department of Pathology (Lieske, Rissi) and Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory (Rissi), College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, GA.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines 179 cases of salivary gland diseases in dogs submitted to a veterinary diagnostic lab from 2010 to 2018, highlighting their clinical and pathological features.
  • The majority of affected dogs were around 8.5 years old, with no significant patterns related to sex or breed; most submissions were due to regional swelling.
  • Diagnoses included nonspecific sialoadenitis as the most common condition, with neoplasia being the second most frequent; most tumors were identified as epithelial and malignant, affecting primarily extraoral glands.

Article Abstract

Salivary gland diseases are well characterized in human medicine but are uncommonly reported in dogs. Herein we describe the clinical and pathologic features of 179 canine salivary gland biopsy submissions to the Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory from 2010 to 2018. The mean age of affected dogs was 8.5 y; no sex or breed predisposition was evident. The main reason for sample submission was regional swelling (107 cases; 59.7%). Extraoral (major) salivary glands were affected in 125 cases (69.8%), and oral (minor) salivary glands were affected in 43 cases (24% of cases). The location of the lesion (extraoral or oral) was not specified in 11 cases (6.1%). The diagnoses included nonspecific sialoadenitis (89 cases; 49.7%), normal salivary gland (42 cases; 23.4%), neoplasia (36 cases; 20.1%), salivary gland lipomatosis (7 cases; 3.9%), necrotizing sialometaplasia (4 cases; 2.2%), and traumatic hemorrhage (1 case; 0.5%). Most cases of sialoadenitis (63 cases), neoplasia (23 cases), and lipomatosis (5 cases), as well as all cases of necrotizing sialometaplasia and the only case of traumatic hemorrhage, affected extraoral glands. Most neoplasms (32 cases, 88.8% of the tumors) were epithelial and malignant, followed by round cell tumors (2 cases; 5.5%), a carcinosarcoma (1 case; 2.7%), and a tumor of undetermined histogenesis (1 case; 2.7%).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7438648PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1040638720932169DOI Listing

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