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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Kitten with severe spine curve and breathing trouble

By Lee, Maris S et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2014·Veterinary Surgical Centers, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Congenital thoracic lordosis and scoliosis in a cat.

Species:
cat
Breathing & coughCats

Plain-English summary

A 10-week-old domestic shorthair kitten was brought in for breathing problems and a bluish tint to its skin, which were linked to a serious spinal deformity. X-rays revealed a severe curvature of the spine and a flattened chest, likely affecting the kitten's ability to breathe properly. The vet planned a two-part surgery to correct the deformity, starting with a procedure to expand the chest cavity. Unfortunately, after the first surgery, the kitten developed a collapsed lung and sadly passed away despite emergency treatment.

People also search for: kitten breathing problems · congenital spine deformity in cats · cat surgery recovery issues

Abstract

A 10-week-old domestic shorthair kitten was referred for intermittent episodes of dyspnea, cyanosis and a suspected congenital thoracic anomaly. Physical examination showed an obvious palpable concavity in the caudal thoracic spine. Thoracic radiographs showed severe caudal thoracic lordosis from T5 to T13 with a Cobb angle of -77°, a centroid lordosis angle of -68°, a vertebral index of 6.3 and a flattened sternum. Severe loss of vital capacity was suspected and surgical correction of the thoracic deformity was to be performed in two separate stages, the first being surgical ventral distraction on the sternum to increase thoracic volume and rigid fixation with an external splint. The second stage, if required, would be surgical correction of the spinal deformity to also increase thoracic volume. The initial stage of surgery was performed and postoperative radiographs showed a vertebral index of 10.3. The kitten suffered a left sided pneumothorax in recovery and died from cardiorespiratory arrest despite immediate pleural drainage and cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Treatment recommendations that may benefit future case management are discussed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24393777/