Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

“ Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure…” - Marianne Williamson.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "“ Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure…” - Marianne Williamson."— Presentation transcript:

1 “ Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure…” - Marianne Williamson

2

3 An acute or chronic inflammatory disease of the external ear canal  Clinical signs: › Head rubbing or shaking › Ear scratching › Head tilt – with the affected ear tilted down › Malodorous otic discharge (brown, greenish- yellow) › Lichenification, hyperpigmentation, crusts, erythema and excoriations may be present › Aural hematoma

4 NOTE THE EXCESS BROWN EXUDATE AURAL HEMATOMA ERYTHEMA, HYPERPIGMENTATION, LICHENIFICATION

5  PREDISPOSING FACTORS: › Conformation  Heavy, pendulous ears  Stenotic ear canals  Ear hair › Excessive moisture  Frequent bathing or swimming › Hypersensitivities  Food allergy, atopy

6  DIAGNOSIS: › Otoscopic exam › Clinical signs › Cytology, ear smear  Yeast, bacteria, cerumen, skin cells

7  MALASSEZZIA OTITIS Malassezzia resemble footprints, bowling pins, or snowmen

8  BACTERIAL OTITIS ROD-SHAPED BACTERIA AND A SKIN CELL

9  TREATMENT › Always treat the underlying condition if present › Topical meds instilled daily  Antibacterial, antifungal, or combination products often with steroids (otomax, tresaderm, baytril otic)  Cleaning ears during treatment › Surgical intervention may be required  Aural hematoma  Chronic conditions (Total Ear Canal Ablation)

10 The anal sacs are located between the muscle layers of the anus at the 4 and 8 o’clock positions. Each sac connects to the surface through a narrow duct. Sebaceous glands produce a foul-smelling oily, brown fluid. The sacs are naturally expressed during defecation, but can sometimes overfill.

11

12  IMPACTION › When the sacs overfill, the water can be reabsorbed, and the material dries out.  Sacs become a source of discomfort for the dog and are difficult to express at this time. › Impaction can lead to abscessation and rupture.  Clinical signs include: scooting rear end across the floor, painful defecation, tail chasing, perianal erythema, and/or swelling

13

14  DIAGNOSIS › Palpation (rectally or externally) › Clinical signs  TREATMENT › Express contents › Flush sac › Instill antibiotic ointment › Oral antibiotics, anti-inflammatories › Surgery?

15 WEARING GLOVES, GENTLY MILK THE GLANDS IN AN UPWARD MOTION TO EXPRESS.

16 Tumors are a new growth of tissue characterized by progressive, uncontrolled proliferation of cells. Benign vs. Malignant Localized vs. Invasive Adenoma/Carcinoma vs. Sarcomas

17  HISTIOCYTOMA: small, button-like tumors that are usually pink, hairless, and raised. They are rapidly growing Common locations include the pinnae, head, and legs

18  HISTIOCYTOMA › Occurs almost exclusively in young dogs <4yrs old  DIAGNOSIS › Appearance › biopsy  TREATMENT › These tumors may spontaneously regress, but surgical excision is the treatment of choice ROUND CELL TUMOR

19  LIPOMA: tumor of the subcutaneous adipocytes (fat cells) that are typically freely movable and well-circumscribed › Common in older, female, obese dogs  DIAGNOSIS: › Biopsy › Fine needle aspirate

20  LIPOMA › TREATMENT:  Surgical excision  Benign neglect lipocytes

21  PAPILLOMAS: wart-like growths that develop as smooth, white/pink/pigmented, elevated lesions in the oral cavity (oral papillomatosis) or on the skin (cutaneous papillomas) › These growths are caused by a papillomavirus

22  PAPILLOMAS › DIAGNOSIS:  Appearance  Biopsy › TREATMENT  Usually spontaneous regression  Autogenous vaccine

23  SEBACEOUS GLAND CYSTS: Slow growing, encapuslated, round, and exude a gray, cheeselike material. Caused by degenerative changes in the glandular area surrounding the follicle. › Common in cocker spaniels  DIAGNOSIS  Contents of the cyst  histology  TREATMENT › Surgical removal of entire encapsulated cyst

24 SEBACEOUS CYSTS

25  FELINE VACCINE-INDUCED FIBROSARCOMAS: rapidly developing, highly invasive, malignant tumors that occur at the site of vaccination ~4-6 weeks later. › VACCINES MOST COMMONLY IMPLICATED ARE THOSE WITH ADJUVANTS (substance that enhances the immune response by increasing the stability of a vaccine in the body) SUCH AS FeLV AND RABIES

26  VACCINE- ASSOCIATED SARCOMAS › DIAGNOSIS:  Biopsy of fine needle aspirate  Physical exam findings  Swelling in area of recent vaccination  Rapidly growing firm elongated mass

27  VACCINE-ASSOCIATED SARCOMAS › TREATMENT  Radical surgical excision which may involve limb amputation is the treatment of choice › CLIENT INFORMATION  Poor prognosis if not detected early and treated aggressively  Inflammatory lumps may do develop after vaccines but usually disappear within 1-2 weeks

28 FELINE VACCINE-ASSOCIATED SARCOMAS

29  MAST CELL TUMORS: firm nodules on the skin that may be ulcerated or edematous. Mast cells contain histamine and heparin

30 FINE NEEDLE ASPIRATE OF MAST CELL TUMOR; NOTE THE NUMEROUS GRANULES

31 IN CATS, MAST CELL TUMORS ARE USUALLY BENIGN AND MAY SPONTANEOUSLY REGRESS

32  MAST CELL TUMOR › TREATMENT  Chemotherapy  Radiation therapy  BENADRYL  H2 blockers to treat gastric ulceration and irritation › PROGNOSIS  Depends on biopsy “grading” results

33  MELANOMA (Benign or Malignant) › BENIGN: small, slow growing, hairless, pigmented › MALIGNANT: large, dome-shaped sessile +/- pigmentation  Ex: Tumors of the oral cavity and digits  Poor prognosis  Metastasize readily  Recurrence after surgery is common

34 TREATMENT INVOLVES SURGICAL REMOVAL AND POSSIBLY TREATMENT WITH THE VACCINE


Download ppt "“ Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure…” - Marianne Williamson."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google