Osteosarcoma of the hyoid bone in a cat

Author:

Nakaichi Munekazu1ORCID,Itamoto Takuya2,Nemoto Yuki1,Sunahara Hiroshi3ORCID,Itoh Harumichi2,Itamoto Kazuhito2,Tani Kenji3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Radiology, Joint Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Yamaguchi University, Yamaguchi, Japan

2. Department of Veterinary Small Animal Clinical Science, Joint Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Yamaguchi University, Yamaguchi, Japan

3. Department of Veterinary Surgery, Joint Faculty of Veterinary Science, Joint Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Yamaguchi University, Yamaguchi, Japan

Abstract

Case summary A 10-year-old male neutered Abyssinian cat was presented with the chief complaint of a right pharyngeal mass. On palpation, the mass was easily palpable; it appeared well demarcated and mobile, and oval in shape. Radiographic examination showed a radiopaque pharyngeal mass, which was revealed to be a well-demarcated mass lesion with a radiopaque marginal area on CT examination. The inside of the mass was uniformly well enhanced on contrast CT examination. A three-dimensional image reconstructed from the CT images strongly suggested that the mass originated from the right stylohyoid bone. No abnormal lesions were observed in the thoracic and abdominal CT examinations. Surgical excision of the mass was scheduled 3 weeks after the first admission. The mass was bluntly separated from the surrounding musculature and resected together with the ipsilateral epihyoid bone adjacent to the mass. Histopathological examination of the resected mass showed neoplastic cells with osteoid formation, and the mass was histopathologically diagnosed as an osteosarcoma. The postoperative recovery from anaesthesia was uneventful, and the cat began feeding on its own from the third postoperative day. The 3-month postoperative CT evaluation revealed no local recurrence or distant metastasis. The cat showed no abnormal findings at the time of writing (6 months postoperatively). Relevance and novel information Although osteosarcoma derived from the hyoid bone has rarely been reported in the veterinary field, this report suggests that such tumours may occur in cats. In addition, partial excision of the hyoid apparatus seems to be well tolerated in cats.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Small Animals

Reference21 articles.

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