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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with common arterial trunk heart defect and breathing trouble

By Nakao, S et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2021·Department of Biomedical Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Common arterial trunk in a cat: a high-resolution morphological analysis with micro-computed tomography.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 6-month-old female cat was brought in for breathing problems and a noticeable heart murmur. Tests showed serious heart issues, including an unusual heart structure where a single artery was responsible for both the aorta and pulmonary arteries, which is not normal. Unfortunately, despite the diagnosis, the cat's condition worsened over the next year, leading to severe heart failure and her eventual passing. This case highlights the importance of advanced imaging techniques for diagnosing complex heart problems in pets.

People also search for: cat breathing problems · heart murmur in kittens · cat heart failure symptoms

Abstract

A 6-month-old female cat presented with respiratory distress. Physical examination showed a grade 5/6 holosystolic murmur with prominent precordial impulse over the left cranial chest wall. Echocardiography revealed bilateral hypertrophy of the ventricular walls, a dilated ascending aorta overriding the interventricular septum, a membranous ventricular septal defect and no obvious pulmonary trunk or pulmonary artery branches. Turbulent blood flow was detected around the ventricular septal defect and ascending aorta. Follow-up assessment, 12 months later, revealed marked and progressive biatrial dilation and biventricular hypertrophy. Four months after that, the cat died of severe congestive heart failure. To make a definitive postmortem diagnosis, we performed contrast enhanced micro-computed tomography (CT) on the ex vivo heart with micron-scale spatial resolution imaging and three-dimensional reconstruction. Micro-computed tomography analysis confirmed a common arterial trunk that bifurcated into the left pulmonary artery and aorta 5-mm distally from the truncal valve. The pulmonary trunk was absent. Slightly distal to the first branching, the common arterial trunk further branched into the right pulmonary artery and ascending aorta, indicating the aortic dominant form. Although CT angiography would be a preferred imaging modality for living animals, micro-computed tomography is a valuable tool for the ex vivo diagnosis of complex cardiac anomaly, such as presented in this cat.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33486210/