Legend had surgery this morning to remove two hard oral growths. One was at the base of his LL canine and the other was between the last premolar and carnassial LR.
His ear had a lump right behind the base (bell of the ear) and I kept palpating it and it really felt like a cyst.
I was confident in my own diagnosis as I have seen a lot of these at the Vet hospital where I worked.
The Veterinarians here do not do FNA on any lumps. They want to remove them completely for concerns of releasing cells that may be cancerous.
We did a CBC SuperChem panel prior to surgery and his MCV was low and MCHC was elevated by a small amount. I figured it was due to stress going to the vet office and possible inflammation.
We removed both hard growths from his mouth, (they were small) and they did not have the appearance of being cancerous but we sent off tissue to the pathologist just to be sure.
When we removed the lump on his ear it was a cyst.
I was excited to see it.
It had lots of dead cells, hair and a little tiny piece of suture from when his ears were cropped.
We removed the complete sac and sutured up his ear.
Now I will wait on the path report to confirm whether the samples are benign.
Fingers crossed.
After losing 2 of my Dobermans to cancer, I am anxious over it.
After he came out of anesthesia he was ready to get home and acted like nothing had been done to him.
He is a tough and stoic boy just like all my dobes.
Now he gets chicken and rice with supplements and minerals until his mouth fully heals.
His ear had a lump right behind the base (bell of the ear) and I kept palpating it and it really felt like a cyst.
I was confident in my own diagnosis as I have seen a lot of these at the Vet hospital where I worked.
The Veterinarians here do not do FNA on any lumps. They want to remove them completely for concerns of releasing cells that may be cancerous.
We did a CBC SuperChem panel prior to surgery and his MCV was low and MCHC was elevated by a small amount. I figured it was due to stress going to the vet office and possible inflammation.
We removed both hard growths from his mouth, (they were small) and they did not have the appearance of being cancerous but we sent off tissue to the pathologist just to be sure.
When we removed the lump on his ear it was a cyst.
I was excited to see it.
It had lots of dead cells, hair and a little tiny piece of suture from when his ears were cropped.
We removed the complete sac and sutured up his ear.
Now I will wait on the path report to confirm whether the samples are benign.
Fingers crossed.
After losing 2 of my Dobermans to cancer, I am anxious over it.
After he came out of anesthesia he was ready to get home and acted like nothing had been done to him.
He is a tough and stoic boy just like all my dobes.
Now he gets chicken and rice with supplements and minerals until his mouth fully heals.

