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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Pneumatosis of the intestines, colon and liver in a young cat.

Journal:
Veterinary medicine and science
Year:
2018
Authors:
Hutchinson, Kristen M et al.
Affiliation:
The University of Minnesota
Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 9-month-old female domestic medium hair cat, who lived indoors, was brought to the vet because she was vomiting, having trouble breathing, and suddenly collapsed. During the examination, the vet found she was very cold, seemed confused, had weak pulses, a fast heart rate, pale gums, and an enlarged spleen. Tests showed she had severe anemia, low protein levels, and a serious imbalance in her blood chemistry. X-rays revealed gas in her liver, spleen, and intestines, indicating a severe condition. Unfortunately, because her prognosis was poor, the decision was made to euthanize her, and a post-mortem examination revealed significant internal bleeding and gas buildup in her organs, which had not been reported in cats before.

Abstract

To describe a case of naturally occurring pneumatosis intestinalis, pneumatosis coli and emphysematous hepatitis in a cat. A 9-month-old, indoors-only, female spayed, domestic medium hair cat presented for vomiting, open-mouth breathing and acute collapse. The initial physical examination identified moderate to severe hypothermia [35°C (95°F)], obtunded mentation, weak femoral pulses, tachycardia (heart rate 240 beats per min), pale pink mucous membranes and significant splenomegaly on abdominal palpation. Immediate diagnostics performed [packed cell volume and total solids (PCV, TS), venous blood gas and electrolytes] revealed severe anaemia (PCV 12%), hypoproteinaemia (TS = 2.2 g/dl), and severe metabolic acidosis (pH 6.956). Additional diagnostics performed included Feline Leukaemia Virus and Feline Immunodeficiency Virus testing (FeLV/FIV), complete blood count (CBC) with pathology review, serum biochemistry profile, prothrombin time (PT) and partial thromboplastin time (PTT), urinalysis, and abdominal radiographs. Abdominal radiographs were consistent with gas within hepatic and splenic veins and parenchyma, small intestinal walls and colonic wall. Due to the guarded prognosis, euthanasia was elected. Necropsy was performed and the most significant gross and histopathological findings included intra-luminal and intra-mural intestinal haemorrhage and vascular congestion with mild neutrophilic hepatitis, and marked hepatic periportal emphysema. Clostridium perfrigens and Escherichia coli were cultured from the bowel wall; no bacterial growth from the liver or spleen was identified. This case report describes idiopathic emphysematous hepatitis, with concurrent emphysema of the spleen and intestinal wall and intestinal haemorrhage. To the authors' knowledge, this type of pathology in a feline patient has not been previously described.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29851314/