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    Treatment, prognosis of feline nasal cancer
      
    Nasal tumors occur primarily in the nasal cavity and may later extend to the frontal and
    paranasal sinuses. Nasal tumors form a very small percentage of feline tumors and are
    less common than nasal cancer in dogs . They are locally invasive and do not normally
    spread but are almost always malignant. They are not sex specific and usually occur at a
    young age.

    In cats there is an indication that inflammation of the mucous membrane lining the nose or
    one of the paranasal sinuses may be the trigger that leads to a growth in the nasal cavity.
    Symptoms of nasal cancer in cats can remain concealed for as long as five years till the
    disease presents itself as a serious threat. Unlike the symptoms of liver cancer in dogs,
    symptoms of nasal cancer seldom mimic symptoms of other conditions.

    Nasal tumors and nasopharyngeal tumors reflect different symptoms. Nasal tumors often
    have a past history of nasal discharge and sneezing. Nasopharyngeal tumors on the other
    hand manifest as heavy breathing, often with a snoring sound and change in vocalism.
    Other signs include bleeding and facial deformity.

    The veterinarian would look for clinical signs of a mass effect on digital palpation of the
    soft palate, inflammatory polyps and a history of bacterial or viral rhinitis. If the clinical
    findings point towards a nasal or nasopharyngeal tumor, laboratory tests and imaging
    is done to investigate further to confirm or rule out cancer.

    * Complete blood tests some times reveal concurrent symptoms associated with nasal
    cancer, such as an abnormally low platelet count.
    * Cytological examination of an aspirate of the local lymph node.
    * Radiography of the thorax is done to obtain three views to rule out metastasis to
    the lungs.
    * Biopsy.
    * Imaging of the area with CT scan, MRI or radiography of the nasal cavity.

    The two most common types of nasal tumors in cats are lymphoma (cancer of the lymph
    tissue) and carcinoma (cancer of the epithelial tissue). Chemotherapy is reasonably
    effective mode of treatment for nasal lymphoma but cats with feline leukemia virus are at
    a risk of systemic failure. An aggressive treatment for nasal lymphoma should thus be a
    combination of local radiation and systemic chemotherapy.

    Studies reveal that carcinomas in the nasal cavity treated with surgery have resulted in
    an average survival time of 2 to 5 weeks. The results of irradiation on nasal tumors have
    not been studied extensively. The nasal cavity of cats is deep and nasal tumors may be
    difficult to approach for excision. Radiation alone may be effective for treating nasal
    tumors using orthovolatage and megavoltage radiation therapy. For accessible tumors
    surgery before radiation may be the recommended treatment.

    Nasal cancer presents a poor prognosis irrespective of the stage it has advanced to.
    Side effects of radiation result in persistent change in turbinates, ophthalmic and
    corneal ulcerations. Surgery, on the other hand, does not improve the survival time
    and owners are often forced to consider euthanasia within two to eight weeks.
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