Camels and Camelids

SWEAT-GLAND-TUMOUR WITH OSSEOUS METAPLASIA ‘‘CHONDROID SYRINGOMA” IN THE ONE-HUMPED CAMEL (Camelus dromedarius)

Journal Edition: June 2016
Article DOI: 10.5958/2277-8934.2016.00028.X
Published On: 03-09-2018 19:05

R.O. Ramadan1, A.M. Zakia1, A.I. Almubarak1, F.A. Al-Hizab3,S.E. Barakat3, O.M. Ahmed2 and O.I. Alturki4
1Department of Clinical Studies, Department of Pathology3, 4Department of Anatomy,
College of Veterinary Medicine & A.R; King Faisal University (CVMAR, KFU)
2Veterinary Research Institute, Department of Pathology, Khartoum, Sudan

ABSTRACT

A pleomorphic adenoma of sweat gland is a rare cutaneous adnexal neoplasm in domestic animals. We diagnosed such a tumour in a 12-year-old-male camel. The mass which occurred on the lateral part of the left masseter region was hard, infiltrative and covered by an intact skin. Grossly, following surgical excision the mass was grayish in colour. Histologically, the neoplasm displayed irregular tubules of varying shape, size and surrounded by thin connective tissue. These lobules were composed of either solid sheet or formed glandular structure with multilayer tubules. The neoplastic cells of both solid cells and glands were polygonal with indistinct boundaries and abundant faint pink cytoplasm that was vacuolated. The nuclei of these cells were small, vesicular with marginated chromatin. Areas of malignant transformation were encounterd, where the neoplastic cells revealed cellular and nuclear pleomorphism and moderate mitotic activity. Interspersed among the neoplastic tubules were osteoid trabeculae. The neoplastic cells of solid mass and tubule revealed dense and diffuse cytoplasmic immunoreactivity with S-100 protein, whereas only the epidermal epithelium showed immunopositive reactivity to cytokeratin.
Key words: Camel, chondroid syringoma, dromedary, neoplasm, sweat gland