PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat diagnosed with systemic tuberculosis from Mycobacterium bovis

By Yesari Eroksuz et al.·Published in BMC Veterinary Research·2019·Department of Pathology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Firat University, GB·View original on DOAJ

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Case report: systemic tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium bovis in a cat

Species:
cat
Feline leishmaniasisStomach & digestionCats

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old male stray cat was found to have systemic tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium bovis after a postmortem examination. The cat showed severe inflammation in the lungs, liver, lymph nodes, and kidneys, which led to the diagnosis. Tests ruled out other viral infections, and the bacteria were found to be sensitive to several antibiotics. Unfortunately, this case highlights a rare and serious infection in cats, and the cat did not survive.

People also search for: cat tuberculosis symptoms · Mycobacterium bovis in cats · cat lung infection treatment

Abstract

Abstract Background The diagnosis of previous cases of feline tuberculosis in Turkey has been made based solely on pathological changes without isolation of the causative agent. This case report details the first case of feline tuberculosis in Turkey for which the causative agent (Mycobacterium bovis) was confirmed with microbiological isolation, morphological evaluation, molecular (PCR) characterization and antibiotic sensitivity. Case presentation Systemic tuberculosis was diagnosed via postmortem examination of a 5-year-old stray male cat. Mycobacterium bovis was isolated from the lungs, bronchial and gastrointestinal lymph nodes, kidney and liver. The isolate was defined as M. bovis using the Genotype MTBC assay (Hain Lifescience, Germany), which allows differentiation of species within the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex with an easy-to-perform reverse hybridization assay. Pathological changes were characterized by multifocal to coalescing granulomatous inflammation in the lungs, liver, lymph nodes and kidneys. Further pathological changes included severe, diffuse, hepatocytic atrophy, periportal fibrosis with lymphohistiocytic infiltration, multifocal lymphohistiocytic interstitial nephritis, mild focal pulmonary anthracosis and mild renal and hepatic amyloidosis. Infection by immunosuppressive viral pathogens including feline herpes virus-1, feline immunodeficiency virus and feline parvovirus virus were ruled out by polymerase chain reaction assay (PCR). The isolated mycobacteria were susceptible to isoniazid, ethambutol, rifampicin or streptomycin. Conclusion Disseminated M. bovis is a rare infection in cats. Involvement of submandibular lymph nodes suggested that primary transmission might have been the oral route in the present case.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-018-1759-7