วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 17 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Dog Bladder Tumor - Canine health

Veterinary Surgery:

In dogs bladder tumors are a rare occurrence. Bladder tumors are of two distinct forms, one is potentially fatal while the other is benign. To ensure your dog remains salutary and free from such tumors continue reading this article.

The symptoms of bladder tumors in dogs are as follows:

1. The dog may go to the toilet a lot more than usual

Veterinary Surgery:Dog Bladder Tumor - Canine health

2. There will be a diminutive estimate of blood in the urine produced.

3. They dog may struggle to produce any urine.

As mentioned above there are two distinct forms of bladder tumors one being malignant which can be potentially life threatening while the other being benign. The benign or non progressive type of bladder tumors usually leaves the tissue which surrounds the growth relatively unharmed and does not spread to other parts of the body.

Squamous cell carcinomas and transitional cell carcinomas are the two most base types of bladder tumors . Both of these are extremely malignant which means that they may spread to other parts of the body. Polyps are very rare but unlike the two mentioned above they are benign and do not spread to other parts of the body.

To make sure that the dog remains salutary any such growth will be need to removed. Complications arise depending on where the tumors is placed inside the body. If it is close to an organ or a vital body part then the risks of surgery increase.

Treatment is not precisely sufficient when it comes to dealing with cancer and tumors in a dog's bladder and this can prove to be a very high-priced option. Most population try and keep their dog on antibiotics and painkillers to try to ease the pain as much as possible as the dog begins to suffer and then on a later stage the dog is put down as humanely as possible.

Your vet may guide a estimate of tests such as ultrasound scans, x-rays and even passing a camera straight through the bladder of the dog. Only after all these tests will the vet know for sure whether the dog has been affected by a tumors or not. To decide the type of tumors the dog has the vet will have to guide a biopsy.

If it is a polyp tumors then it will want surgery to be removed. possible complications arise depending on the location of the tumors . If it is placed at the bladder neck skilled surgery or involved reconstruction would be required to keep the connection in the middle of the bladder and the urethra intact and even if the surgery goes as planned there are always chances that the dog may come to be incontinent for a short while after the surgery.

If the tumors is whether squamous cell carcinomas or transitional cell carcinomas the vet will have to guide supplementary x-rays of the abdomen and the chest in order to decide how far the tumors cells have spread.

If the vet has considered that the tumors hasn't spread then they may try and take off the malignant cell. Of procedure there are many difficulties and risks in doing this. A Lot of salutary tissue may need to be removed in order to take off a cancerous tumors from the dog's body and to be clear that all the effected cells have been removed. This results in the vet having a lot less room to work with as compared to the polyp tumors . It is also likely that vital body parts and organs will cause hindrance.

Most vets will still try to take off the tumors first and then use chemotherapy and radiation to take off the remaining cancerous cells. A histopathologist will decide the type of therapy depending on the samples given to them

Veterinary Surgery:Dog Bladder Tumor - Canine health

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