- Equine sarcoid
Equine Sarcoids or Sarcoids are common, usually benign, skin tumours of horses and other
equidae which have several different forms.Aetiology
The cause is not fully understood but a viral cause is suspected. In particular,
bovine papillomavirus types 1 and 2 have been implicated. [Chambers G, Ellsmore VA, O'Brien PM "et al." Association of bovine papillomavirus with the equine sarcoid. "J Gen Virol" (2003) 84:1055-1062]Typical appearance
They typically occur from the tail under the back legs, along the
ventral midline to the chest and the head.*Occult sarcoidsThese are flat, hairless, lichen-like, slightly crusting, dark patches. They often have a smooth, dark hairless area around them.
*Verrucose sarcoidsThese are raised, nobbly, dark areas that often spread into poorly defined margins. They can also be
ulcerated on occasions.*Nodular sarcoidsThese are firm and nodular skin lumps which may have normal skin over them.
*Fibroblastic sarcoidsThese are often
ulcerated , weeping, raised sore lesions that may become pedunculated and cauliflower-like.*Mixed sarcoidsSarcoids are commonly a mixture of two or more of the forms described above.
*Malevolent sarcoidsThese are rare, invasive sarcoids that invade deeper tissues beneath the skin. [Knottenwelt, DC, "Proceedings of the 9th SIVE Congress, 2003 [http://www.ivis.org/proceedings/SIVE/2003/lectures/knottenbelt2.pdf] ]
Very often warts in the girth area can be mistaken for sarcoids and also match the descriptions above. Another common cause of similar pathology is
dermatophytosis (fungal infection on the skin).Diagnosis
A positive diagnosis can only be made using
histopathology of abiopsy , however in most cases the location and character of thelesions is so suggestive of equine sarcoid that a diagnosis can be made and abiopsy may be contraindicated as it can awaken an otherwise slow growing lesion [A Martens, A de Moor, R Ducatelle. PCR detection of Bovine Papilloma Virus DNA in superficial swabs and scrapings from equine sarcoids.The Veterinary Journal (2001) 161, 280-286.] .Treatment
Treatments may include banding with rubber rings, surgical excision,
cryosurgery , injection withBacillus Calmette-Guérin as animmunomodulator , radioactivity [Michael Walker DVM, William Adams DVM, James Hoskinson DVM, J.P. Held DMV, James Blackford DVM, Dennis Geiser DVM, Dallas Goble DVM, John Henton DVM (1991) IRIDIUM-192 BRACHYTHERAPY FOR EQUINE SARCOID, ONE AND TWO YEAR REMISSION RATES Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound 32 (4), 206–208.] andtopical or injectedchemotherapy agents. No one treatment is suitable for all sarcoids and it is essential that individual cases are assessed by a veterinarian to ensure that the best treatment is selected. Sarcoids can be difficult to treat and this has encouraged manybogus treatments to be put forward.Prognosis
It is occasionally possible to successfully remove all of a horse's sarcoids but in many cases the treatment results in control rather than resolution of the lesions.
References
External links
* [http://pcwww.liv.ac.uk/sarcoid/ Twenty facts you need to know about sarcoids, A guide for vets, owners and trainers by DC Knottenbelt BVM&S, DVM&S, MRCVS]
* [http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/horsecare/vet/tag/Sarcoids Equine Sarcoids] Horse & Hound magazine (UK)
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