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A case of a dog with mandibular extraskeletal osteosarcoma after long-term puncture extirpation of the salivary gland cyst in the mandible
Abstract
Background: Extraskeletal osteosarcoma, unlike skeletal osteosarcoma, is a rare malignant mesenchymal tumor with
a soft tissue primary that has been reported to occur in a variety of soft tissues.
Case Description: The case is a 14-year-old, unneutered male Miniature Pinscher, weighing 6.7 kg, who had been treated medically for more than 5 years with a management strategy of puncture extirpation of a salivary gland cyst in the mandible; 1 month earlier, the fluid retention could not be removed, and after a computerized tomography scan showed no lesion in the mandible adjacent to the mass lesion, surgical resection was performed.
Conclusion: Previous reports of extraskeletal osteosarcoma from the salivary glands in dogs have been rare. However, treatment of a salivary gland cyst in the mandible by long-term puncture extirpation may be a potential predisposing factor for the development of extraskeletal osteosarcoma around the mandible.