All submissions of the EM system will be redirected to Online Manuscript Submission System. Authors are requested to submit articles directly to Online Manuscript Submission System of respective journal.

Mammary Adenocarcinoma

 A mammary tumor is a neoplasm creating in the mammary gland. It is a shared discovery in older female dogs and cats that are not sterilized, but they are originating in other animals as well. The mammary glands in dogs and cats are related with their nipples and spread from the underside of the chest to the groin on both flanks of the midline. There are numerous changes amid mammary tumors in animals and breast cancer in humans, including tumor kind, malignancy, and action options. The occurrence in dogs is about three eras that of women. In dogs, mammary tumors are the second greatest shared tumor (after skin tumors) over all and the greatest mutual tumor in female dogs with a reported incidence of 3.4%. Many studies have recognized that spaying female dogs when young greatly reductions their risk of emerging mammary neoplasia when aged. Associated with female dogs left complete, those spayed before adolescence have 0.5% of the risk, those spayed after one estrous cycle have 8.0% of the risk, and dogs spayed after two estrous cycles have 26.0% of the risk of developing mammary neoplasia later in life.

High Impact List of Articles

Relevant Topics in Chemistry