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Musculoskeletal System
Osteopathies in Small Animals
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  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
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Chapters in Musculoskeletal System
  • Musculoskeletal System Introduction
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies of the Musculoskeletal System
  • Dystrophies Associated with Calcium, Phosphorus, and Vitamin D
  • Arthropathies in Large Animals
  • Lameness in Cattle
  • Lameness in Goats
  • Lameness in Horses
  • Lameness in Pigs
  • Lameness in Sheep
  • Myopathies in Ruminants and Pigs
  • Myopathies in Horses
  • Bovine Secondary Recumbency
  • Lameness in Small Animals
  • Arthropathies and Related Disorders in Small Animals
  • Myopathies in Small Animals
  • Osteopathies in Small Animals
  • Sarcocystosis
Topics in Osteopathies in Small Animals
  • Overview of Osteopathies in Small Animals
  • Developmental Osteopathies in Small Animals
  • Osteomyelitis in Small Animals
  • Hypertrophic Osteopathy in Small Animals
  • Nutritional Osteopathies in Small Animals
  • Bone Tumors in Small Animals
  • Bone Trauma in Small Animals
 
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Bone Tumors in Small Animals

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Skeletal tumors can be benign or malignant and primary or secondary to metastases or adjacent soft-tissue structures. The most common primary bone tumor is osteosarcoma that affects the distal radius, proximal humerus, distal femur, or proximal tibia.

Clinical signs include lameness, bone swelling, and an acute, nontraumatic pathologic fracture of the bone. Radiography reveals osteolysis, proliferation, and soft-tissue swelling; thoracic radiographs should be performed to delineate metastatic masses. Bone biopsy using a Michelle bone trephine or Jamshidi biopsy needle is imperative in confirming the diagnosis. Less frequently identified tumors include chondrosarcoma, fibrosarcoma, and hemangiosarcoma. Treatment includes limb amputation and chemotherapy with carboplatin, cisplatin, or doxorubicin. Palliative care to reduce pain and discomfort can be provided with oral NSAID, opioids, transdermal patches, or radiation therapy. Prognosis is guarded. Untreated animals rarely live more than several months. Amputation and chemotherapy may double the survival times. Median survival times after amputation are 5 mo in dogs and 4 yr in cats. Advanced procedures such as limb sparing and excision of meta-stases are infrequently performed.

Photographs

Osteosarcoma, dog

Osteosarcoma, dog

Last full review/revision March 2012 by Joseph Harari, MS, DVM, DACVS

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