Abstract
A 5-y-old backyard Araucana–Americana rooster was presented to the regional diagnostic laboratory with a history of progressive lethargy and respiratory signs. Autopsy revealed a single large mass of testicular origin in the coelomic cavity, causing compression of other organs. Histologically, the mass was 1 neoplasm with mixed components of 2 different germ cell tumors, namely a teratoma composed of elements of all 3 primordial germ cell lines (ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm), and a seminoma consisting of round or polygonal cells arranged in sheets supported by a scant fibrovascular stroma. Teratomas and seminomas are both considered to be uncommon neoplasms in poultry medicine. A testicular teratoma is composed of mature embryonic tissue derived from at least 2 of the 3 germinal layers. Seminomas and teratomas both arise from the germinal epithelium of seminiferous tubules and are classified as germ cell tumors. This neoplastic mass thus is a rare case of a mixed germ cell tumor.
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Tavella, V. J., Walters, J. N., Crofton, L. M., & LeRoith, T. (2019). Mixed germ cell tumor composed of a tridermic testicular teratoma and seminoma in a rooster. Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, 31(3), 395–398. https://doi.org/10.1177/1040638719838001
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