Difference between revisions of "Cytology Q&A 10"
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*Nuclear chromatin is dense and clumped. | *Nuclear chromatin is dense and clumped. | ||
The cytological interpretation is a well-differentiated hepatic lymphoma. | The cytological interpretation is a well-differentiated hepatic lymphoma. | ||
− | |l1= | + | |l1=Lymphoma - Cytology |
|q2=Discuss the condition. | |q2=Discuss the condition. | ||
|a2= | |a2= | ||
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*Cats with hepatic lymphoma usually have severe hepatomegaly, whereas with lymphocytic periportal hepatitis, hepatomegaly is typically mild. <br><br> | *Cats with hepatic lymphoma usually have severe hepatomegaly, whereas with lymphocytic periportal hepatitis, hepatomegaly is typically mild. <br><br> | ||
Histological confirmation is recommended in cats with severe lymphocytic infiltrates and marked hepatomegaly, regardless of the cytological appearance of the lymphocytes. | Histological confirmation is recommended in cats with severe lymphocytic infiltrates and marked hepatomegaly, regardless of the cytological appearance of the lymphocytes. | ||
+ | |l2=Lymphoma - Cytology | ||
|q3=Discuss the prognosis and treatment options. | |q3=Discuss the prognosis and treatment options. | ||
|a3=Treatment options include chemotherapy. In a few isolated cases where the tumour is localized and easily accessible, surgery or radiation therapy may be used. <br><br> | |a3=Treatment options include chemotherapy. In a few isolated cases where the tumour is localized and easily accessible, surgery or radiation therapy may be used. <br><br> | ||
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Cats that are not treated have an average survival time of only 4–6 weeks once the diagnosis has been made. <br><br> | Cats that are not treated have an average survival time of only 4–6 weeks once the diagnosis has been made. <br><br> | ||
Note: As pointed out above, the small lymphocytes illustrated in this case do not have features associated with classical lymphoid malignancy (large numbers of large lymphocytes and lymphoblasts) as is usually seen in the dog. It is important to include well-differentiated or so-called ‘small cell’ lymphoma in your differential diagnosis list in addition to lymphocytic periportal hepatitis when lymphocytes are numerous in a hepatic aspirate. | Note: As pointed out above, the small lymphocytes illustrated in this case do not have features associated with classical lymphoid malignancy (large numbers of large lymphocytes and lymphoblasts) as is usually seen in the dog. It is important to include well-differentiated or so-called ‘small cell’ lymphoma in your differential diagnosis list in addition to lymphocytic periportal hepatitis when lymphocytes are numerous in a hepatic aspirate. | ||
− | |l3= | + | |l3=Lymphoma#Treatment |
</FlashCard> | </FlashCard> | ||
Revision as of 07:12, 9 August 2011
This question was provided by Manson Publishing as part of the OVAL Project. See more [[:Category:{{{book}}}|{{{book}}}]]. |
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An eight-year-old female spayed DSH cat presented with a two-week history of intermittent vomiting. There was an acute onset of lethargy and anorexia. Significant findings on physical examination included icterus and severe hepatomegaly. CBC findings included moderate, nonregenerative anaemia (PCV = 0.23 l/l). Abnormal biochemistry findings were: ALT = 360 U/l (ref. = 10–80 U/l); ALP = 120 U/L (ref. = 2–43 U/l); bilirubin = 55 μmol/l (ref. = 0–3.4 μmol/l). An FNA of the liver was obtained and a smear made (Wright–Giemsa, ×25).
Question | Answer | Article | |
Describe the cytological findings, and give your cytological interpretation. |
The cytological interpretation is a well-differentiated hepatic lymphoma. |
Link to Article | |
Discuss the condition. | Many cats with hepatic lymphoma will present cytologically with an abundant population of small, well-differentiated lymphocytes.
Histological confirmation is recommended in cats with severe lymphocytic infiltrates and marked hepatomegaly, regardless of the cytological appearance of the lymphocytes. |
Link to Article | |
Discuss the prognosis and treatment options. | Treatment options include chemotherapy. In a few isolated cases where the tumour is localized and easily accessible, surgery or radiation therapy may be used. A combination of chemotherapeutic drugs, including doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide and vincristine, and prednisone, administered over many weeks is the most common course of treatment. During the course of treatment leukocyte and erythrocyte numbers are closely monitored.
In general, about 70% of cats will respond to the chemotherapy protocol. On average, these cats will live an additional 4–6 months. However, about 30–40% of the cats that respond will go into a more complete remission that can last for two years or longer. |
Link to Article |