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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Pregnant cat died after partial abortion with Cytauxzoon infection

By Weisman, Jaime Lee et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2007·University of Georgia, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Blood smear from a pregnant cat that died shortly after partial abortion.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 1-year-old pregnant cat was brought to the vet after she aborted three kittens the night before. During the exam, she started having seizures and sadly passed away. Tests on her blood showed she had a serious infection caused by a parasite called Cytauxzoon felis, which can affect cats and is often transmitted by ticks. This infection can lead to severe illness and complications, including abortion in pregnant cats. Unfortunately, the exact cause of the abortions remains unclear, but the infection was confirmed as the likely cause of her sudden decline.

People also search for: cat abortion causes · pregnant cat seizures · Cytauxzoon felis treatment · why did my cat abort kittens · cat blood infection symptoms

Abstract

A 1-year-old, 5- to 6-week pregnant cat was presented with a history of aborting 3 kittens the previous night. During the examination, the cat began to seizure and died. At necropsy, formalin-fixed tissues and blood smears prepared from an EDTA blood sample collected via cardiac puncture were submitted to a diagnostic laboratory. Examination of the blood smears revealed numerous large (15-75 microm) clumped macrophages containing dark blue intracytoplasmic organisms consistent with Cytauxzoon merozoites. Scattered erythrophagocytic macrophages were also observed. Within several erythrocytes, 1-2 small, round, ring-like piroplasms consistent with Cytauxzoon were observed. Histologic examination revealed numerous large, schizont-laden macrophages filling the blood vessels of multiple organs. The cytologic and histologic findings were diagnostic for Cytaxuzoon felis infection. This case was of particular interest because of the unusually large number of organism-laden macrophages in the cardiac blood sample, an uncommon finding in peripheral blood. Although the cat was presented for complications of abortion, it remains uncertain whether C felis organisms crossed the placenta and infected the fetuses or lead to the abortions.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17523099/