Login / Signup

Multilobular tumor of bone on the forehead of a guinea pig.

Hitoshi HataiNobuhide KidoKenji Ochiai
Published in: Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc (2020)
Multilobular tumor of bone (MLTB) is an infrequent, slow-growing, bone neoplasm formed predominantly on the head. These tumors can behave as malignant neoplasms clinically and pathologically and can metastasize occasionally. No cases of MLTB in rodents have been reported, to our knowledge. We describe a novel case of an MLTB in a guinea pig. An adult guinea pig had an exophytic mass fixed on the frontal bone, maxilla, and nasal bone. On radiography, the mass had a spherical contour and variable density and was formed on the surface of the cranial bones. The mass was excised surgically. The cut surface was light-yellow to milky-white and had a granular texture with fine fibrous septa. Histologically, the neoplasm had a multilobular pattern, which consisted of many islands of bone and/or cartilage matrix surrounded by small cells and separated by fibrous septa, which closely resembles the equivalent neoplasm in dogs.
Keyphrases
  • bone mineral density
  • soft tissue
  • bone loss
  • bone regeneration
  • low grade
  • air pollution
  • computed tomography
  • cell death
  • cell cycle arrest
  • cell proliferation
  • chronic rhinosinusitis