1. Photodynamic detection of a canine glioblastoma using 5‐aminolevulinic acid
- Author
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Yoshiharu Okamoto, T. Tanaka, M. Ishizuka, Masamichi Yamashita, K. Takahashi, Liming Li, Tomohiro Osaki, and Yuji Sunden
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Protoporphyrin IX ,040301 veterinary sciences ,business.industry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Autopsy ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Brain tissue ,medicine.disease ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Resection ,0403 veterinary science ,Lesion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Text mining ,chemistry ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Small Animals ,business ,Glioblastoma - Abstract
Photodynamic detection using 5-aminolevulinic acid has been used to identify the surgical margins during resection of human primary brain tumours. Although there are some reports on its use in malignant tumours in veterinary medicine, it has never been used for primary brain tumours. Here we describe a canine glioblastoma that was detected at autopsy with protoporphyrin IX fluorescence induced by orally administered 5-aminolevulinic acid. The fluorescence was strongest towards the centre of the lesion and was absent in normal brain tissue. Moreover, the fluorescence findings were consistent with MRI and histopathological findings. Our findings suggest that photodynamic detection using 5-aminolevulinic acid might be useful for intraoperative fluorescence-guided resection of malignant gliomas in dogs.
- Published
- 2018
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