A review of equine sarcoid
نویسنده
چکیده
Equine sarcoid is the most common tumour of horses and accounts for over half of all equine skin tumours. Six types of sarcoid based on gross appearance and clinical behaviour have been described including occult, verrucous, nodular, fibroblastic, mixed and malevolent. Common locations for sarcoid development include the periocular region, ear pinnae, lips, neck, extremities and ventrum (including groin region). Bovine papillomavirus (BPV) is causally associated with equine sarcoid with genetic haplotype, fly vectors and skin trauma identified as potential risk factors for development of the disease. Histopathology is required for definitive diagnosis of equine sarcoid but incomplete excision is thought to activate latent BPV and stimulate growth. Although there are no uniformly effective treatment options, several modalities have been successful in eliminating or managing equine sarcoid. Surgical excision, intratumoural chemotherapy, cryotherapy, hyperthermia, radiotherapy, immunotherapy and immune modulators are used with degrees of success relative to the accessibility and invasiveness of the tumour. Prevention of equine sarcoid may be facilitated by future development of vaccines against bovine papillomavirus.
منابع مشابه
The clinical challenges of the equine periorbital sarcoid
The equine sarcoid affects horses of all ages, types, and colours without obvious sex predilection and is commonly encountered worldwide. It is by far the commonest equine skin neoplasm (Jackson, 1936; Thomsett, 1979; Pascoe and Summers, 1981; Genetzky, Biwer and Myers, 1983; Marti, Lazary and Gerber, 1993; Broström, 1995). Although the sarcoid has been recognised for centuries (Erk, 1976), it ...
متن کاملO6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase in equine sarcoids: molecular and epigenetic analysis
BACKGROUND Bovine papillomaviruses (BPVs) types 1 and 2 are the only known papillomaviruses able to jump the species. In fact, BPVs 1/2 induce neoplasia in their natural bovine host but infection is also associated to neoplastic skin lesions in equids termed sarcoids. The equine sarcoid is considered to be the most common equine cutaneous tumour worldwide for which no effective therapy is avail...
متن کاملCultural characteristics of a cell line derived from an equine sarcoid.
A cell line, derived from a spontaneous equine connective tissue tumor (equine sarcoid), has been established. The morphological and growth characteristics indicative of malignant transformation of the cells include a disoriented, rapid growth and loss of contact inhibition. Further evidence of transformation is the agglutination of these cells by concanavalin A and their ability to divide in s...
متن کاملHow to Treat Equine Sarcoids by Autologous Implantation
Sarcoid skin tumors are the most common nodular skin tumors in the horse. They are typically nonmetastatic but can be locally aggressive and ulcerated. They may account for up to 90% of equine dermatological neoplasms. Approximately 40% of affected horses have more than one lesion and up to 50% of horses may have recurring lesions after surgical excision. Two of six subtypes of bovine papilloma...
متن کاملAssociation of bovine papillomavirus with the equine sarcoid.
The equine sarcoid, a locally aggressive, fibroblastic skin tumour, is the most common dermatological neoplasm reported in horses; there is no consistently effective therapy. It is widely accepted that bovine papillomavirus (BPV) types 1 and 2 are associated with the pathogenesis of sarcoid disease. Most sarcoids appear to contain detectable viral DNA and RNA and are also known to express the B...
متن کامل