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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ménétrier-like disease in a Pointer with concurrent granulomatous gastritis, helicobacteriosis and leishmaniosis: a case report.

Journal:
BMC veterinary research
Year:
2021
Authors:
Lagerstedt, E et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Equine and Small Animal Medicine
Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A nine-year-old spayed female Pointer was diagnosed with a rare stomach condition called Ménétrier-like disease, which is characterized by thickened stomach lining and can cause symptoms like vomiting, not eating, and weight loss. She had been experiencing intermittent vomiting and significant weight loss, and tests showed changes in her stomach lining along with signs of other issues like granulomatous gastritis (inflammation of the stomach) and Helicobacter infection. After treatment for the Helicobacter infection and another condition called leishmaniosis, her vomiting decreased, she regained weight, and her stomach inflammation improved. However, when palliative treatments were stopped, her vomiting returned, leading to a diagnosis of Ménétrier-like disease. Despite the challenges, she has been doing well for 39 months after her initial diagnosis, which is a positive outcome for this condition.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ménétrier-like disease is a rare hypertrophic canine gastropathy, reported in only seven dogs. Clinical signs are vomiting, anorexia and weight loss. Macroscopically, giant cerebriform gastric mucosal folds are typically seen in the corpus and fundus of the stomach. Histopathologically, fundic mucous cell hyperplasia and loss of parietal and chief cells are typical. CASE PRESENTATION: A nine-year-old spayed female Pointer had a history of intermittent vomiting, marked weight loss and hypoalbuminaemia. A gastroduodenoscopy was performed three times within three months with macroscopic changes remaining the same. The gastric mucosa of the corpus, fundus and proximal antrum was markedly irregular, with cerebriform mucosal folds. In the first gastric biopsies, histopathology revealed a moderate granulomatous gastritis, with a severe manifestation of Helicobacter-like organisms. Treatment for Helicobacter spp. decreased the vomiting slightly. The dog was diagnosed with concurrent leishmaniosis; the conventional anti-Leishmania treatment decreased the vomiting moderately, the hypoalbuminaemia resolved and the dog gained weight back to a normal body condition. Granulomatous gastritis was not present in the gastric biopsies after these treatments. The dog increased vomiting when palliative treatment (maropitant citrate, ondansetron and esomeprazole) was discontinued, and thus, full-thickness biopsies of the stomach were taken and Ménétrier-like disease was diagnosed. The affected area was too large to be surgically removed; thus, palliative treatment was reinstated. The dog remained clinically well 39 months after the first clinical presentation. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report of Ménétrier-like disease in a dog with a simultaneous manifestation of granulomatous gastritis, helicobacteriosis and leishmaniosis. The clinical signs decreased after treatment of helicobacteriosis and leishmaniosis, but vomiting remained probably as a sign of Ménétrier-like disease. Treatment options for dogs are surgical removal of the abnormal area or palliative treatment. In humans, promising results for a cure have been shown with cetuximab treatment, a human monoclonal antibody, but no canine antibody is commercially available yet. The dog here was doing well 39 months after first presentation, which is the longest reported survival time for Ménétrier-like disease with only palliative treatment in dogs. Full-thickness biopsies are preferred in macroscopic hypertrophic lesions of the stomach for better assessment of Ménétrier-like disease.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33653341/