Uterine adenomyosis in an orang-utan (Pongo abelii/pygmaeus) |
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Authors: | KJ Graham FA Hulst L Vogelnest IS Fraser CM Shilton |
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Affiliation: | North Shore Veterinary Specialist Centre, Crows Nest, New South Wales 2065, Australia;; Veterinary Quarantine Centre, Taronga Zoo, Sydney, NSW, Australia; Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia |
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Abstract: | A 48-year-old, multiparous, female hybrid orang-utan ( Pongo abelii/pygmaeus ) was investigated after a 3-year history of irregular and excessively heavy menstrual bleeding. Opportunistic pelvic examinations over a 2.5-year period were non-diagnostic. Medical therapy was not effective. A subtotal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-ovariectomy was performed. A pedunculated mass spanning 90% of the uterine lumen was seen grossly, and histopathology confirmed uterine adenomyosis. Adenomyosis is defined as the ectopic occurrence or diffuse implantation of endometrial tissue, including glands and stroma, into the myometrium. It is common in older, usually premenopausal, multiparous women and is frequently associated with other uterine pathology, including endometrial hyperplasia and leiomyomas. The most common clinical signs are dysmenorrhoea and heavy menstrual bleeding; however, up to 35% of women are asymptomatic. Diagnosis is difficult and requires myometrial sampling and an experienced pathologist. A hysterectomy in this case was diagnostic and curative. There have been few reports of uterine adenomyosis in non-human primates and none reported in an orang-utan. Uterine adenomyosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis in any multiparous, aged, non-human female primate with irregular and excessively heavy menstrual bleeding, and hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-ovariectomy is recommended as a diagnostic and therapeutic solution. |
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Keywords: | dysmenorrhoea hysterectomy orang-utan Pongo abelii/pygmaeus uterine adenomyosis |
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