By Karen Templeton
MSU College of Veterinary Medicine
MISSISSIPPI STATE – A group of veterinarians at Mississippi State
University’s College of Veterinary Medicine is working to better
understand cancer in dogs, work that will likely also advance knowledge
of human cancer.
MSU scientists said there is little difference between cancerous
tumors found in dogs and humans, and the opportunity to help both human
and canine patients is growing.
“The answers may be in blood platelets. We have a lot to gain by
looking at platelets and how they influence cancer and healing,” said
Dr. Camillo Bulla, assistant professor in the college’s Department of
Pathobiology and Population Medicine. “The platelet is very small, but
it gives us a large picture. We hope to be able to find a tumor much
sooner by taking a series of blood samples to look at platelet
contents.”
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