Feline Intestinal small cell lymphoma or chronic enteropathy? How to diagnose and treatJ DandrieuxAustralian Veterinary AssociationAustralian Veterinary Association Annual Conference
Felineleukemia virus (FeLV), which is subclassified into three subgroups of A, B and C, is a pathogenicretrovirusincats. FeLV-A is minimally pathogenic, FeLV-C can causepure red cell aplasia, and FeLV-B is associated with a variety of pathogenic properties such as lymphoma, leukemia and an...
Pegylated-l-asparaginase therapy for feline large cell lymphoma: 82 cases (2017-2020). January 01, 2023 [ MEDLINE Abstract ] Breathe easy: inhalational therapy for feline inflammatory airway disease. January 01, 2023 [ MEDLINE Abstract ] ...
Lymphoma and evidence of myelodysplasia or leukemias are the most common findings, but opportunistic infections may also be detected. The intestinal tracts of cats with FeLV-associated enteritis reveal crypt cell necrosis and regeneration, lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates, and blunting and fusion of villi...
Intestinal biopsies from 50 cats with alimentary lymphoma (small cell, n = 33; large cell, n = 17) and 38 controls without lymphoma (normal to minimal change on histopathology, n = 18; lymphocytic-plasmacytic enteritis, n = 20) were evaluated. The number and spatial distribution of ...
this may be due to low viral loads or lack of specificity of the assays due to sequence diversity of different FIV isolates. In conclusion, jaguarundi #5 had developed a non FeLV-associated intestinal B-cell lymphoma; involvement of FIV in the development of the neoplasia cannot completely be...
Abdominal ultrasound revealed prominent mesenteric lymph nodes, mildly thickened intestinal muscularis and a large bladder stone. The differential diagnosis included IBD, GI small cell lymphoma and EPI (TLI results pending). During surgery to remove the bladder stone, the pancreas was observed to be ...
Lymphoma, Cutaneous Epitheliotropic. Lysosomal Storage Diseases. Malassezia Dermatitis. Malignant Fibrous Histiocytoma (Giant Cell Tumor). Malocclusion—Skeletal and Dental. Mammary Gland Hyperplasia—Cats. Mammary Gland Tumors—Cats. Mammary Gland Tumors—Dogs. Marking and Roaming B...
Neoplasia: lymphoma (most common), mast-cell tumor Biliary sludging (especially in anorexic cats) Cholangiohepatitis (septic and immune mediated) Hepatic lipidosis (hallmark of diagnosis is an elevatedALPwith a normal GGT) Feline infectious peritonitis ...
This cell tropism is mediated by the spike protein. Thus, S protein sequence changes likely alter the target cells invaded by the virus [16,17]. Of the two distinct pathotypes of feline coronavirus, FECV prefers to replicate within intestinal epithelial cells, whereas FIPV prefers to replicate ...