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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cabot rings found in a cat with blood disease

By Fujimoto, Mizuki et al.·Published in Veterinary clinical pathology·2024·Joint Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Japan·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cabot rings in a cat with myeloproliferative disease.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 6-year-old spayed female Scottish Fold cat was brought in because she was very tired and not eating. Blood tests showed she had severe anemia, which means her body wasn't making enough healthy red blood cells. Despite treatments like steroids, blood transfusions, and vitamins, her condition got worse over time. Sadly, she passed away about six weeks after her initial visit. A necropsy revealed cancerous cells in her bone marrow, which likely caused her symptoms and the presence of unusual structures in her blood called Cabot rings.

People also search for: cat lethargy and not eating · Scottish Fold anemia treatment · cat blood transfusion outcome

Abstract

A 6-year-old spayed female Scottish Fold cat presented with lethargy and anorexia. A complete blood cell count indicated severe anemia and mild thrombocytopenia. Examination of peripheral blood smears revealed marked changes in the erythroid lineage, including the presence of basophilic stippling and Howell-Jolly bodies as well as an increase in nucleated erythrocytes, polychromatophils, ovalocytes, and schistocytes. Additionally, some erythrocytes contained a ring or figure-eight shaped structure known as a Cabot ring, which were especially observed in polychromatophilic erythrocytes. Hemolytic diseases (Mycoplasma infection and IMHA) were diagnostically excluded, and the cat was treated through prednisolone administration, whole blood transfusion, and administration of vitamins (K2 and B12); however, the anemia progressively worsened. Cabot rings were observed until Day 22 and subsequently disappeared as the number of nucleated RBCs increased, and the erythrocyte lineage shifted to immature population. On Day 42, peripheral blood examination revealed further left shifting and appearance of many rubriblasts. The patient died at home on Day 43. Necropsy revealed neoplastic cells infiltrating the bone marrow and other organs, which were immunopositive to CD71 which is an erythroid lineage marker. In humans, Cabot rings have been observed in megaloblastic anemia, lead poisoning, myelodysplastic syndrome, and myelofibrosis; further, they are thought to be related to stressed bone marrow and dyserythropoiesis. This is the first case report of a cat with Cabot rings, which are suggestive of defects in erythroid lineage production.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38641552/