Volume 13, Issue 2 pp. 16-20
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Multiple Cytopenias Associated with Monocytic Proliferation in a Dog

V.M. Hirsch

V.M. Hirsch

Department of Veterinary Pathology

Harvard School of Public Health Department of Cancer Biology 665 Huntingdon Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 02115

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S.A. Mitcham

S.A. Mitcham

Department of Veterinary Pathology

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J.K. Dunn

J.K. Dunn

Department of Internal Medicine Western College of Veterinary Medicine University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, S7N 0W0 Canada

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First published: April 1984
Citations: 2

Summary

An unusual combination of blood cytopenias and monocytic proliferation was observed in a dog. Initial hematologic findings included severe thrombocytopenia, neutro-penia, mild nonregenerative anemia and apparently normal bone marrow. Subsequently, a severe persistent monocytosis developed and the bone marrow became populated with monocytes and cytophagic macrophages. Splenomegaly was due to reticuloendothelial hyperplasia and extramedullary hematopoie-sis. Treatment consisted of splenectomy and azathioprine but the response was poor and the dog was euthanized. Postmortem examination revealed a hypocellular bone marrow which contained moderate numbers of monocytes and plasma cells. Neoplastic proliferation was absent in visceral organs. No definite diagnosis was established; chronic blood cell consumption, perhaps immune-mediated, may have been responsible for the extensive reticuloendothelial hyperplasia and cytophagia.

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