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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with fungal infection causing eye bulging and nasal issues

By Barachetti, Laura et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2009·Dipartimento di Scienze Cliniche Veterinarie, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Bilateral orbital and nasal aspergillosis in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 12-year-old male Persian cat was brought to the vet after experiencing sneezing and a runny nose for two months. The vet found signs of inflammation in the cat's nasal passages and initially treated it with prednisone, which helped, but the symptoms returned and the cat developed eye problems. Further tests revealed a fungal infection caused by Aspergillus, which had spread to the cat's eyes and brain. Despite surgery to remove the affected eye and treat the infection, the cat sadly died during the procedure.

People also search for: cat sneezing and runny nose · Persian cat eye problems · cat nasal fungal infection treatment

Abstract

A 12-year-old, 4 kg, castrated male Persian cat was referred with a 2-month history of sneezing and bilateral mucopurulent nasal discharge. Rhinoscopically acquired nasal biopsies at this time revealed bilateral lymphoplasmacytic rhinitis. A tapering dose of oral prednisone caused the complete remission of the clinical signs, but 2 months after discontinuation of the therapy, the rhinitis recurred and the OD became exophthalmic. Computed tomography showed a soft tissue mass in both sides of the nasal cavity, both frontal sinuses, the right orbit, and to a lesser extent the left orbit. A fine needle aspirate of the right orbit revealed pyogranulomatous inflammation and Aspergillus spp. hyphae. Repeat nasal biopsy demonstrated multi-focal necrosis and a mixed inflammatory cell process which now included macrophages and scattered septate fungal hyphae. A few days later the cat became bilaterally blind and a contrast enhancing lesion involving the optic chiasm was found on magnetic resonance imaging. Despite a poor prognosis, therapy consisted of exenteration of the right orbit and trephination of both frontal sinuses before the planned initiation of medical antifungal therapy. Unfortunately, the cat died of cardiac arrest intraoperatively. Aspergillus fumigatus was cultured from both orbits at necropsy. Orbital aspergillosis has been rarely reported in cats and its relationship with lymphoplasmacytic rhinitis is unclear. In this patient lymphoplasmacytic rhinitis or previous antibiotic/corticosteroid therapy may have allowed secondary fungal invasion of the nasal mucosa and subsequently both orbits and the brain. Alternatively, Aspergillus infection may have preceded the lymphoplasmacytic rhinitis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19392877/