RSSAll Entries in the "Treatments of Canine Cancer" Category

Animal Cancer Update – Melanoma

Animal Cancer Update – Melanoma

Melanomas are relatively common tumours in dogs, but rare in cats. In both species they can range in behaviour from benign (harmless) to malignant (potentially fatal). For many animals with a melanoma of the skin, surgical removal is curative. The most accurate way to predict the behaviour of a skin tumour is to have a [...]

Animal Cancer Update – Mast cell tumours in dogs

Animal Cancer Update – Mast cell tumours in dogs

Mast cell tumours are the most common cancers of the skin and underlying (subcutaneous) tissue in dogs, despite being rare in people. Whilst the genetic abnormalities that occur within the cancer are well characterised, the causes are unknown. Breeds such as Boxers, Labrador retrievers and Staffordshire bull terriers are at much higher risk than other [...]

Animal Cancer Update -  Breast Cancer in Dogs and Cats

Animal Cancer Update - Breast Cancer in Dogs and Cats

Breast cancer, usually mammary carcinoma, is a relatively common disease in dogs and cats that have not been desexed before 2 years of age. Animals desexed at or before 6 months of age have the lowest risks. Around 5 out of every 6 breast growths in cats and half in dogs, are malignant. This means [...]

Animal Cancer Update - Tumours of the Canine Male Reproductive Tract

Animal Cancer Update - Tumours of the Canine Male Reproductive Tract

Testicular cancer
Fortunately, testicular cancer in dogs is usually much less aggressive than in man. For the majority of dogs, surgical removal of the tumour is curative. Whilst many people are uncomfortable with the idea of castrating a pet, we all have a duty to safeguard our pet’s health, and castration is kinder than cancer. In [...]

Animal Cancer Update - Lymphoma

Animal Cancer Update - Lymphoma

Lymphoma is the most common cancer formed from blood cells that occurs in dogs and cats. However, the chance of any one dog developing this disease over any one-year period is less than 1 in 1000. This disease is similar to non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in people, and has been called lymphosarcoma and malignant lymphoma. The different [...]

Animal Cancer Update - Haemangiosarcoma

Animal Cancer Update - Haemangiosarcoma

Haemangiosarcoma is a cancer that forms from blood vessels. It most commonly forms in the skin, or internal organs such as the spleen or heart. In both dogs and cats, the internal form is very serious. Without treatment, most patients have a life span of days to weeks. The skin form can be aggressive in [...]

Animal Cancer Update - Tumours of the Female Reproductive Tract

Animal Cancer Update - Tumours of the Female Reproductive Tract

Ovarian Tumours: These are uncommon in dogs and cats. Most of the tumours that occur in both species are cancerous and have spread by the time of diagnosis to other parts of the abdomen, as well as the lungs. Most of the time, the first symptom will be an enlarging abdomen. Sometimes, the tumours produce [...]

Animal Cancer Update – Carcinoma

Animal Cancer Update – Carcinoma

Carcinomas are cancers that originate in tissues that line the inside or outside of organs, such as the skin, lungs and intestine, or from glandular tissues such as the breast. They vary in how aggressive they behave; for some, surgical removal is curative, whilst for others metastatic spread through the body occurs long before the [...]