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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Vestibular disease signs and MRI results in 77 cats with outcomes

By Negrin, Arianna et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2010·Department of Animal Medicine and Surgery, Spain·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical signs, magnetic resonance imaging findings and outcome in 77 cats with vestibular disease: a retrospective study.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 77 cats showing signs of vestibular disease, like loss of balance or head tilt, underwent MRI scans to determine the cause of their symptoms. The most common issues found were inflammatory conditions, such as infections from ear problems, and some cases of cancer. Many cats with idiopathic vestibular syndrome (a type of vestibular disease with no known cause) showed rapid improvement in their symptoms. Overall, most cats recovered well, especially those with the idiopathic form, which had a better outcome compared to other causes.

People also search for: cat vestibular disease symptoms · cat head tilt treatment · cat balance problems recovery

Abstract

Medical records of 77 cats that had clinical signs of vestibular disease and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head were reviewed retrospectively. The aetiological, clinical and MRI characteristics were described and evaluated for a relationship with patient outcome. Forty cats (52%) had signs of central vestibular dysfunction (CVD), which was part of a multifocal disease in 17 cats (43%). The most frequent causes of CVD were inflammatory conditions (18 cats; 45%), including bacterial inflammation as an intracranial extension of otitis interna (five cats; 13%), feline infectious peritonitis (three cats; 8%) and toxoplasmosis (two cats; 5%). Neoplasia (12 cats; 30%) and vascular disease (four cats; 10%) were respectively the second and the third most frequent causes of CVD. Thiamine deficiency was diagnosed in one cat based on MRI findings and improvement following vitamin B(1) supplementation. Of 37 cats (48%) with peripheral vestibular dysfunction (PVD), idiopathic vestibular syndrome (IVS) was suspected in 16 (43%) and otitis media/interna was suspected in 16 (43%). Within the group of cats with evident MRI lesions, the location of the imaged lesions agreed with the clinical classification of vestibular dysfunction in 52/55 (95%) cats. Most of the cats (nine cases; 56%) with presumed IVS had rapid and complete recovery of their clinical signs. As most of these cats presented with progressive clinical signs over 3 weeks they were classified as having 'atypical' IVS to differentiate them from cats with the typical non-progressive IVS. No underlying systemic diseases were documented in any of these cases. Statistically significant predictors of survival included neurolocalisation (central or peripheral vestibular system), age and gender. No difference in survival was observed between cats with presumed idiopathic peripheral syndrome and cats with otitis media/interna.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19932040/