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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Healing chronic neck skin wounds from nerve pain in a cat

By de Moura, Carlos Eduardo Bezerra et al.·Published in Veterinary research communications·2024·Departamento de Ci&#xea, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: A combined treatment for self-traumatic chronic skin lesions associated with post-surgical neuropathic pain in a domestic cat: a pharmacological and cold atmospheric plasma approach.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 6-month-old cat with chronic skin lesions caused by itching after surgery was treated with a combination of cold plasma therapy and medications. The treatment included a single application of cold atmospheric plasma along with ketamine, prednisone, gabapentin, and amitriptyline. Within just 10 days, the cat showed significant improvement in the skin lesions, and the owner noticed the intense itching stopped within four hours of treatment. The cat continued to do well for almost a year after treatment, with no signs of the condition returning.

People also search for: cat skin lesions treatment · cold plasma therapy for cats · cat itching after surgery · gabapentin for cat pain · prednisone for cat skin problems

Abstract

Cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) has been employed as a therapy against both acute and chronic skin lesions, contaminated or not, and has effects on angiogenesis and reepithelialization promoting healing. In this context, the present study aimed to evaluate the effects of a CAP jet associated with pharmacological treatment described by the 2015 AAHA/AAFP pain management guidelines and the 2022 WSAVA guidelines for the recognition, assessment, and treatment of pain, on the healing of chronic skin lesions caused by a pruritic reaction resulting from post-surgical neuropathic pain. To this end, a single CAP application was performed on a feline patient with a 6 months old recurrent contaminated cervical skin lesions along with administration of ketamine (10 µg/kg/min) following the prescription of prednisone (1 mg/kg, SID, 6 days), gabapentin (8 mg/kg, BID, 60 days) and amitriptyline (0.5 mg /kg, SID, 60 days). A single application of plasma associated with an NMDA antagonist, anti-inflammatory steroid, tricyclic antidepressant and gabapentinoid thus provided a significant improvement in the macroscopic appearance of the lesion within 10 days, and the owner reported the cessation of intense itching within the first four hours after treatment and a consequent improvement in the animal's quality of life. The medical treatment was finished almost a year since the writing of this paper, without clinical or reported recurrent signs of the condition. Therefore, we observed that single dose CAP application associated with ketamine, gabapentin, amitriptyline and prednisone leads to significant healing of chronically infected skin lesions resulting from post-surgical neuropathic pain.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39133400/