Primary Cardiac Granular Cell Tumor in a Dog

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Abstract

The histological, histochemical, and ultrastructural features of a granular cell tumor in the wall of the right atrium of the heart in a nine-year-old dog are described. The histologic appearance of the mass varied from areas of spindle-shaped cells to sheets of globoid cells with foamy granular cytoplasm. The globoid neoplastic cells contained numerous cytoplasmic granules which were variably positive to periodic acid-Schiff staining, with and without disastase digestion. Ultrastructurally, the globoid cells had numerous various-sized, heterogeneous lysosomes with pleomorphic content. A granular cell tumor originating in the heart has not been reported previously in animals. The support for a neural origin of these tumors by the recent identification of several nervous tissue specific proteins in their granular cells is discussed. © 1984, American College of Veterinary Pathologists. All rights reserved.

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Sanford, S. E., Hoover, D. M., & Miller, R. B. (1984). Primary Cardiac Granular Cell Tumor in a Dog. Veterinary Pathology, 21(5), 489–494. https://doi.org/10.1177/030098588402100506

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