Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Blood smear signs of abnormal blood cells in a cat with anemia
By Grondin, Tanya M et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2006·Department of Diagnostic Medicine/Pathobiology, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Blood smear from a cat: features to "dys"cover.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 4-year-old spayed female domestic shorthair cat was brought to the vet because she was lethargic, not eating, and had low red blood cell counts. Blood tests showed abnormal white blood cells and a specific type of anemia that wasn't improving. Further examination of her bone marrow revealed issues with the development of blood cells, indicating a problem likely linked to a feline leukemia virus (FeLV) infection. Unfortunately, this condition is serious, but the vet diagnosed her with dysmyelopoiesis, which means her bone marrow was not producing healthy blood cells properly. Treatment options would depend on her overall health and the severity of her symptoms.
People also search for: cat lethargy and not eating · cat anemia treatment · feline leukemia virus symptoms · cat bone marrow problems · dysmyelopoiesis in cats
Abstract
A 4-year-old, spayed female, domestic shorthair cat was presented for lethargy, nonregenerative anemia, and inappetence. Results of a CBC included macrocytic, normochromic, nonregenerative anemia and a glucocorticoid-associated leukogram. On blood smear examination, neutrophils had abnormal features including hyposegmentation and a diffuse chromatin pattern with nuclear filament formation and nuclear blebbing. Microscopic examination of a roll preparation of bone marrow revealed hypolobulated megakaryocytes with asynchronous maturation of nuclei. The granulocytic to erythrocyte (G:E) ratio was 76. Segmented neutrophils had asynchronous maturation and dysplastic features. The entire erythroid lineage was markedly decreased for the degree of anemia and rare dysplastic features were noted in erythroid precursor cells. The interpretation of bone marrow findings was erythroid hypoplasia, megakaryocytic dysplasia, and granulocytic hyperplasia with dysplasia. Histopathologic examination of a bone marrow core sample also revealed myeloid hyperplasia and erythroid hypoplasia. The result of a direct immunofluorescence assay for FeLV performed on the bone marrow roll preparation was positive. A diagnosis of dysmyelopoiesis associated with FeLV infection was made. This case was unique in that the dysplastic changes occurred in cell lines that did not have associated cytopenias. The dysmyelopoiesis most closely resembled myelodysplastic syndrome with refractory cytopenia (MDS-RC); however, secondary dysmyelopoiesis could not be ruled out.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17123256/