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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Transient myocardial thickening: a retrospective analysis on etiological, clinical, laboratory, therapeutic, and outcome findings in 27 cats.

Journal:
Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology
Year:
2023
Authors:
Romito, G et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences · Italy
Species:
cat

Abstract

INTRODUCTION/OBJECTIVE: Transient myocardial thickening (TMT) in cats is a poorly characterized clinical entity. Therefore, this study aimed to provide descriptions of additional cats diagnosed with this clinical phenomenon. ANIMALS, MATERIALS, AND METHODS: For this multicenter observational retrospective study, cats diagnosed with TMT were searched in three medical databases. TMT was defined for cats with at least two echocardiograms showing an increased end-diastolic left ventricular wall thickness (LVWTd; i.e.&#xa0;&#x2265;6&#xa0;mm) at presentation and subsequent echocardiographic normalization (i.e.&#xa0;LVWTd <5.5&#xa0;mm). Signalment, history, clinical, laboratory, therapeutic, and outcome data were retrieved. RESULTS: Twenty seven cats were included. The median age was 3 years. In 9/27 cats, an antecedent event was documented. At admission, 27/27 cats had evidence of myocardial injury (median value of cardiac troponin I 5.5&#xa0;ng/mL), 25/27 cats had congestive heart failure, 13/27 cats had hypothermia, 8/27 cats had systemic hypotension, 7/27 cats had bradycardia, and 7/27 cats had electrocardiographic evidence of an arrhythmia. The median LVWTd was 6.4&#xa0;mm. A potential cause of myocardial injury was identified in 14/27 cats. The median time from diagnosis to a significant reduction in LVWTd was 43 days. DISCUSSION: TMT can be diagnosed in a wide range of cats, including young subjects. An antecedent predisposing event and/or a possible causative trigger can be identified in some. The reduction in LVWTd that defines this phenomenon usually occurs over a variable time frame. CONCLUSIONS: This study represents the largest investigation of TMT in cats and provides additional information on this uncommon clinical entity.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37924558/