WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Text book of veterinary medicine, Volume 3 (of 5) cover

Text book of veterinary medicine, Volume 3 (of 5)

Chapter 134: SOLID OVARIAN TUMORS.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

Comprehensive clinical manual detailing disorders of the nervous, genitourinary, ocular, and integumentary systems in domestic animals. It begins with principles of neural control and general symptomatology, classifying motor, sensory, and psychic disturbances and methods for localizing lesions. The text describes specific conditions such as seizures, paralysis, meningitis, intracranial hemorrhage, tumors, and toxicoses, and outlines diagnostic signs and pathological causes. Later sections address urine analysis and renal disease, urinary tract inflammation and calculi, and diseases of the eye, skin, and constitutional systems, combining pathological description with clinical signs, differential diagnosis, and practical guidance for examination and interpretation.

SOLID OVARIAN TUMORS.

These are much more rare than cystic tumors. They seldom maintain the character of perfect solidity, for whether fibrous, sarcomatous, melanotic, cretaceous, myomatous, cancerous, epithelial, tubercular, glanderous, or actinomycotic, they are usually associated with cysts to a greater or less extent. Not only are they liable to stimulate the formation of cysts, but the special heteroplasia may become engrafted on the walls of pre-existing cysts, as well as on normal tissues.

The symptoms of the solid tumors are in the main, those of the cystic form, and treatment resolves itself into extirpation by castration. Its success will vary according to the nature of the tumor, sarcoma, melanoma and carcinoma being especially liable to recur in the same or in distant situations, and the same is true of the colonizing with infectious germs (glanders, tuberculosis, actinomycosis) which are presumably already present in other parts of the body. Castration has, however, this recommendation, it secures the removal of the entire diseased organ, and if the morbid process or infection is confined to that only, it holds out the best prospect of recovery.