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Indolent Nodular Lymphoma in Dogs
Lymphomas in dogs belong to the most common malignant neoplasias which are seen in small animal practice. This brandnew article gives informations about the type of lymphocytes involved in these indolent lymphoid proliferations. Very interesting - and hopefully these insights will help to develop effective therapies in the future!

Sixty-six cases of indolent canine lymphoid proliferation were reviewed.
Age ranged from 1.5 to 16 years (median 9.0 years).

Dogs of 26 breeds, plus 13 of mixed breeding or unknown lineage, were represented. B-Cell lymphomas (CD79a+) predominated.

Marginal zone lymphoma (MZL), the largest group, involved lymph node (33 cases) and spleen (13 cases), with both tissues involved in five of these cases.
Follicular lymphoma (FL) involved lymph nodes (five cases), and mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) occurred as solitary splenic masses (three cases).
Nodal CD3+ T-zone lymphomas (TZL) (10 cases), were included since they resembled late-stage MZL at the architectural level. Two cases of marginal zone hyperplasia (MZH) were included to aid in differentiation of early MZL.
Clonality status was determined in 54 cases by analysis of immunoglobulin heavy chain (IGH) and T-cell antigen receptor gamma (TCRG) gene rearrangement.
Clonal rearrangement of IGH was detected in 28 of 35 MZL cases (80%), four of four FL cases (100%) and three of three MCL cases (100%).

Concurrent cross lineage rearrangement of TCRG was detected in six MZL and two FL cases. Clonal rearrangement of TCRG was documented in five of eight TZL cases (63%).

Limited survival data obtained for 18 dogs indicated that the B-cell lymphomas (MZL, MCL, and FL) and the T-cell lymphoma (TZL) were associated with indolent behavior and long survival.

Although to the authors` knowledge, the true incidence of canine indolent lymphomas is unknown, the tumors are not rare and may have been underrecognized.

Recognition of their architectural features, routine application of immunophenotyping, and molecular clonality assessment should alleviate this.


Source: V. E. Valli, W. Vernau, L.-P de Lorimier, P. S. Graham and P. F. Moore (2006): Canine Indolent Nodular Lymphoma. In: Vet Pathol 43:241-256 (2006)




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SMALL ANIMAL PRACTICE

Reference intervals for blood parameters in Shetland Sheepdogsmembers
Several breeds have physiological peculiarities that induce variations in reference intervals (RIs) compared with the general canine population. Shetland sheepdogs (SSs) are reported to be more predisposed to different diseases (eg, hyperlipidemia, gallbladder mucocele, and hypothyroidism). Consequently, a breedâ€specific approach is more often required. Thus, the aim of this study was to determine whether the RIs of the general canine population could be applied to that of SSs, and to generate breedâ€specific RIs, where appropriate.

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