Coral Springs Animal Hospital's Pawfessional PAWfessional Summer 2017 | Page 21

hepatobiliary tumors. Abdominal ultrasound is the preferred method for identifying and characterizing hepatobiliary tumors in dogs and cats. 2 However, the ability to differentiate ultrasonagraphically benign from malignant hepatobiliary disease process is lacking. In human medicine, MRI and CT have largely surpassed the diagnostic capability of ultrasound for the characterization of focal hepatic and splenic lesions. A study has showed that MRI allows for better differentiation of benign from malignant hepatic lesions in veterinary patients. 5 Cost and anesthesia remain the two largest barriers for hepatic MRI in veterinary patients. 6 One study has showed low sensitivity of a fine needle aspirate with complete agreement in 37% of the cases. 7 Ultimately, histopathology is necessary to establish a diagnosis. Liver lobectomy is the preferred treatment for massive or solitary hepatic nodules. However, the prognosis is often poor for hepatic sarcomas due to presence of metastatic disease at the time of surgery. 4 Chemotherapy has not been investigated in the treatment of primary hepatic sarcomas but like most solid sarcomas, response is often poor. 2 The type of liver lobectomy performed (stapling, suture mass ligation, finger fracture or mattress suture techniques) has no association with survival. The most common complication associated with this type of procedure is hemorrhage (5%-13%). Death during the surgical procedure is highly unlikely and surgical complications have no Figure 5: Note large liver mass (arrow) pushing the gallbladder (x) to the left side of the abdominal wall. significant association with survival. However, in one retrospective study, 4/7 dogs that had a difficult anesthetic recovery (depressed/hypotensive) ultimately arrested. 4 Outcome: Gizmo has returned several times for follow up re-evaluations. Nine months post operatively, his liver enzymes have decreased significantly.