Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Hello - what an interesting development. I'd like to think that you don't need a second opinion; that your vet would have given their best opinion given what they could see at the time, that the situation has changed / developed and that they should review their opinion in light of the new evidence. The devil may be in the wording of this; as a vet, I would never diagnose a tumour with no evidence. I might say 'I'm really concerned that that looks like cancer, can we arrange to biopsy it' or 'the only thing I've seen looking similar to this is a bone tumour (or whatever)' but I would be delighted as the next person if it turned out just to be an abscess. In answer to your question however, oral tumours can indeed become infected and abscessated, so the presence of pus certainly doesn't rule one out. If you go to a new vet, there is no guarentee as to what they would have thought if they'd been presented with that lesion as it was yesterday. Therefore, we would reccommend calling the vets back in case they want to offer you another appointment in the short term eg before the weekend. Please do let us know how you get on.
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