Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello! What a lot of long words pathologists use. This is necessary in order to discuss something very precise, and meaning can be lost without it. I will attempt to translate a paragraph from the middle: "The fact that the lymphocytes (the type of white blood cell that multiplies out-of-control in lymphoma) look small and similar to their neighbours, and aren't dividing very fast, make me suspicious that this might be lymphocytosis (an increase in white blood cells that the pathologist describes in brackets as an indolent form of lymphoma). However, clinical correlation is recommended.'
I think that clinical correlation means looking at the lab results, and taking a closer look at the patient to see if they match. Having never met your cat personally and not having and responsibility for their interpreting their lab results or their treatment, this is definitely a question for your vet. Perhaps questioning could take the following form: "Does clinical correlation mean looking at the results and then looking at the cat and seeing if the two match? So do the clinical signs that my cat is showing correlate with lymphoma then, or do you think that lymphocytosis is more likely? What exactly is the difference between the two for my cat?"
When cats have lymphoma, then as the pathologist points out, knowing whether it is B-Cell or T-cell lymphoma can be useful in planning treatment / discussing prognosis.
I hope that this helps.
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