Oncology Flashcards

1
Q

Hemangiosarcoma

A

most common primary splenic mass in the dog GSD most common
malignant tumour of the blood vessels
high metastasis to lungs/liver/nodes etc
surgical removal is primary treatment

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2
Q

What is the most common splenic disease in the cat

A

Splenic Mast Cell Tumour

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3
Q

Presentation of haemangiosarcoma

A

Incidental abdominal mass
lethargy
cough - metastatic
acute emergency - respiratory collapse

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4
Q

Blood smear sign of neoplasia

A

degenerate/broken erythrocytes

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5
Q

surgical consideration for splenic tumour removal

A

take out the whole spleen, very straightforward, just lots of ligation
may require transfusion
poor prognosis with thrombocytopaenia, PCV<30 and intra-operative arrythmias

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6
Q

Splenic torsion

A

commonly seen in GDV
large/giant breeds are common
cs - abdo pain, collapse, pallor, tachydysrhythmias
can be chronic
treatment - splenectomy

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7
Q

classification of lymphomas

A

alimentary - B-cell - better prognosis
multicentric - T-cell - 80% of lymphomas
mediastinal - high grade - poorer prognosis
extra-nodal - low grade

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8
Q

Lymphomas in cats

A

multicentric associated with FeLV
extranodal more common

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9
Q

Diagnosis of lymphoma

A

FNa
Trucut biopsy - large samples
Excisional/incisional biopsy

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10
Q

points of care with lymphoma

A

not all owners want to treat
drugs in mg/m2 not mg/kg
monitor for side effects
can get very expensive

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11
Q

staging of lympoma

A

1 - single lymph node affected
2- multiple nodes
3 - generalised lymphadenopathy
4 - liver and/or splenic involvement
5 - bone marrow or blood involvement and/or any non lymphoid organ
substage a - without clinical signs, b with clinical signs

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12
Q

factors affecting prognosis

A

clinical stage - high reduces survival
t-cell reduces survival
hypercalcaemia - negative prognosis
anaemia - wont respond

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13
Q

treatment options for lymphoma

A

none
single drug - prednisolone/doxorubin
multi drug - cop/chop
radiation

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14
Q

what drugs are in CHOP

A

C = cyclophosphamide
H = doxorubicin
O = vincristine
P = prednisolone

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15
Q

types of tumour

A

epithelial
mesenchymal
round cell

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16
Q

epithelial tumours

A

agressive metastasising epithelial cells
locally invasive with inflammation
examples; papilloma, squamous cell, transitional cell, adenoma, adenocarcinoma

17
Q

Mesenchymal tumours

A

can spread in blood vessels, extend tendrils into surrounding tissue
examples; fibroma/fibrosarcoma, osteoma/osteosarcoma, haemangioma/haemangiosarcoma, Lipoma/liposarcoma, chondroma/chondrosarcoma

18
Q

Round cell tumours

A

all immune cells
examples; lymphoma, mast cell tumours, plasma cell tumour, histiocytic sarcoma
treatment - chemo

19
Q

features of higher grade tumours

A

higher mitotic rate
poorly differentiated cells
local invasion
necrosis
nuclear/cellular atypia

20
Q

What does TMN mean

A

tumour
Lymph Node
distant metastasis

21
Q

soft tissue sarcoma grading

A

1 - superficial small low-intermediate tumours without mets
2 - superficial large/ or deep tumours with no nodal/distant mets
3 - large and deep tumours without mets
4 - any tumour with nodal/distant mets

22
Q

Types of excision

A

radical - entire compartment eg limb
curative intent - 2-3cm margin
marginal - removing all within the pseudocapsule
cytoreductive - removing bulk within pseudocapsule

23
Q

pathophysiology of neoplasia

A

functional - pain, compression, obstruction,
bleeding
infection - necrosis
effusions
paraneoplastic syndromes - hypercalcaemia, hyperviscosity, hormones

24
Q

what is hyperviscosity

A

thickening of the blood with leukaemia leading to poor perfusion and caused by excess blood proteins

25
Q

how to perform an fna

A

dont scrub
spray with surgical spirit
insert needle and redirect around lump
aspirate onto slide