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Abstract
The health status of a 4-year-old female, dd-haplotype miniature pig deteriorated rapidly, so the animal finally had to be euthanized because of poor clinical condition. Necropsy revealed a massive leukocytic infiltration in the parenchymatous organs of the abdominal cavity. On hematologic cell counting, severe leukocytosis (69.3 x 109 cells/liter) and high-grade basophilia (6.9 x 109 cells/liter) were evident. Cytologic examination, as well as analysis of expression of leukocyte differentiation antigens by means of flow cytometry, classified blasts, which accounted for about 22% of leukocytes, as biphenotypic cells co-expressing the myeloid marker SWC3 (CD172a) and the lymphoid markers CD5 and CD25. Hematologic features resembled those seen in humans with chronic myeloid leukemia at blast phase.
Key words: Blast cells; dd-haplotype; flow cytometry; immunophenotyping; minipigs; undifferentiated leukemia.
Request reprints from Dr. Wolfgang Sipos, Clinic for Swine, Department for Farm Animals and Herd Management, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, Veterinärplatz 1, A-1210 Vienna, (Austria). E-mail: wolfgang.sipos{at}vu-wien.ac.at
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W. Sipos, F. Griessler, F. Schilcher, I. Stumpf, E. Pirker, and F. Schmoll Fibroepithelial Hamartoma in a Domestic Pig Vet. Pathol., May 1, 2007; 44(3): 411 - 413. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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