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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cytology of a mass on the meningeal surface of the left brain in a dog.

Journal:
Veterinary clinical pathology
Year:
2004
Authors:
Sharkey, Leslie C et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Biomedical Sciences · United States
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An 11-year-old neutered male Labrador Retriever was taken to the veterinary hospital because he had been having seizures and changes in his behavior for two weeks. An MRI showed a mass on the surface of the left side of his brain, which was causing fluid buildup. Doctors took samples from the mass during surgery and found signs of a tumor, likely a meningioma (a type of brain tumor). Unfortunately, after 90 days, the tumor grew back, and the dog was euthanized. The final diagnosis confirmed that he had a rare type of meningeal tumor called a granular cell tumor.

Abstract

An 11-year-old neutered male Labrador Retriever presented to Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine for a 2-week history of seizures and altered behavior. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed a homogeneously enhancing mass involving the surface of the left temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes of the brain, causing secondary hydrocephalus. Cytology samples obtained during rostrotentorial craniectomy contained abundant amorphous pink material suggestive of neuropil, scattered leukocytes, capillary fragments, large polyhedral nerve cell bodies, and other smaller cells with pale blue cytoplasm that occasionally were vacuolated and contained fine eosinophilic granules. The cytologic diagnosis was neoplasia, possibly meningioma. Ninety days after surgery the patient was euthanized after MRI results confirmed regrowth of the tumor. Histologic samples of the meningeal lesion collected at necropsy consisted of sheets and nests of loosely packed, large polygonal cells that compressed the brain parenchyma. The cytoplasm was eosinophilic and slightly granular, whereas nuclei were dense and eccentric. Neoplastic cells stained positive for S-100 protein, periodic acid-Schiff, and were partially diastase resistant. Vimentin staining was negative. Ubiquitin staining was light but diffusely positive. Ultrastructural features of the neoplastic cells included numerous secondary lysosomes and irregular pleomorphic nuclei. The final diagnosis was meningeal granular cell tumor. This case documents the cytologic and histologic features of an uncommon type of meningeal tumor.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15195271/