Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cats with limb blood clots from lung cancer tumors
By Ibarrola, Patricia et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2004·Department of Veterinary Clinical Science, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Appendicular arterial tumor embolization in two cats with pulmonary carcinoma.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 13-year-old male Persian cat and an 11-year-old female Persian cat suddenly started limping and showed reduced movement in their affected legs. The vet found that one cat had no blood flow in the left front leg artery, while the other had no pulse in the right back leg. Unfortunately, both cats had lung cancer that caused tumor cells to block their blood vessels. Despite supportive care, one cat died, and the other was euthanized due to the severity of their condition.
People also search for: cat limping · Persian cat cancer treatment · cat leg blood flow issues
Abstract
A 13-year-old neutered male Persian cat and an 11-year-old neutered female Persian cat were examined because of an acute onset of lameness. In both cats, conscious proprioception and reflexes were diminished in the affected limb. In 1 cat, no blood flow was detected in the left brachial artery with a Doppler ultrasonic flow detector, whereas blood flow in the right brachial artery was easily documented. In the other cat, the right femoral pulse was not palpable. Neither cat had any echocardiographic evidence of cardiac disease. In both cats, treatment was primarily supportive. One cat died, and the other was euthanatized. At necropsy, lung lobe consolidation was seen. Microscopically, there was multifocal infiltration of the lung parenchyma with cuboidal to columnar neoplastic epithelial cells. Neoplastic epithelial cells of similar morphology were identified in nodular masses in sections of muscle, and intravascular tumor emboli were identified obliterating small and large arterioles. Immunohistochemical staining of pulmonary and muscular tissue for pan-cytokeratin antigen revealed intense cytoplasmic staining of neoplastic cells. Staining for factor VIII-related antigen confirmed that clusters of neoplastic cells represented intravascular emboli. Clinical signs in the cats were attributed to arterial occlusion by tumor emboli.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15515985/