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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Survival factors for cats after surgery for chest injuries

By Lux, Cassie N et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2018·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Factors associated with survival to hospital discharge for cats treated surgically for thoracic trauma.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 23 cats who suffered serious chest injuries from various causes, including dog attacks and car accidents, underwent surgery at veterinary hospitals. The study found that cats who experienced cardiopulmonary arrest during treatment had a much lower chance of surviving to go home. Overall, the surgery had a low mortality rate, with most cats recovering well, especially those with lower trauma severity scores. The findings suggest that prompt treatment and monitoring are crucial for improving outcomes in cats with thoracic trauma.

People also search for: cat chest injury treatment · cat surgery recovery after trauma · signs of cat cardiopulmonary arrest

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To determine the most common types of injuries in cats surgically treated for thoracic trauma, complications associated with surgical treatment, and factors associated with mortality rate and evaluate the effectiveness of the animal trauma triage (ATT) scoring system for predicting outcome. DESIGN Retrospective case series with nested observational study. ANIMALS 23 client-owned cats surgically treated for thoracic trauma at 7 veterinary teaching hospitals between 1990 and 2014. PROCEDURES Medical records were reviewed to collect data on signalment, medical history, clinical signs and physical examination findings at initial evaluation, clinicopathologic findings, initial emergency treatments and diagnostic tests performed, type of trauma sustained, imaging findings, surgery details, postoperative complications, duration of hospitalization, and cause of death, if applicable. All variables were evaluated for associations with survival to hospital discharge. RESULTS Types of trauma that cats had sustained included dog bite or attack (n = 8 [35%]), motor vehicle accident (6 [26%]), other animal attack (2 [9%]), impalement injury or fall (2 [9%]), projectile penetrating trauma (1 [4%]), or unknown origin (4 [17%]). Intrathoracic surgery was required for 65% (15/23) of cats. The overall perioperative mortality rate was 13% (3/23). Mean ± SD ATT scores for surviving and nonsurviving cats were 6.4 ± 2.2 and 10.0 ± 1.7, respectively. Nineteen of 20 cats with no cardiopulmonary arrest survived to discharge, compared with 1 of 3 cats with cardiopulmonary arrest. Only these 2 variables were significantly associated with outcome. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE The perioperative mortality rate was low in this series of cats with thoracic trauma; however, those with cardiopulmonary arrest were less likely to survive to hospital discharge than other cats. Cats with a low ATT score were more likely to survive than cats with a high ATT score.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30110218/