To optimize the histologic evaluation of hypophysectomy specimens, sections of 207 canine pituitary glands (196 postmortem, 11 hypophysectomy specimens) were reviewed. Adenohypophyseal proliferation was the most common (n = 79) lesion. Proliferative lesions were sparsely to densely granulated; the granules were usually basophilic to chromophobic and periodic acid-Schiff-positive. Adenohypophyseal proliferation was classified as hyperplasia (n = 40) if ≤2 mm diameter with intact reticulin network, as microadenoma (n = 22) for 1–5 mm homogeneous nodules with lost reticulin network, or as macroadenoma (n = 17) for larger tumors. Craniopharyngeal duct cysts were common incidental lesions and the only lesion in 15 dogs. Uncommon diagnoses included lymphoma (n = 4), hemorrhagic necrosis (n = 4), metastatic carcinoma (n = 3), hypophysitis (n = 3), ependymoma (n = 2), craniopharyngioma (n = 2), and 1 case each of metastatic melanoma, pituicytoma, gliomatosis, germ cell tumor, meningioma, and atrophy. The pituitary histologic diagnosis was associated with hyperadrenocorticism (HAC; P 80% of cases. Pituitary macroadenoma was the most common diagnosis in hypophysectomy specimens.
CITATION STYLE
Miller, M. A., Bruyette, D. S., Scott-Moncrieff, J. C., Owen, T. J., Ramos-Vara, J. A., Weng, H. Y., … Jahan, S. (2018). Histopathologic Findings in Canine Pituitary Glands. Veterinary Pathology, 55(6), 871–879. https://doi.org/10.1177/0300985818766211
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