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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

CT scan ratios in heartworm-infected cats with and without treatment

By Lee-Fowler, Tekla M et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2018·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: High-resolution CT evaluation of bronchial lumen to vertebral body, pulmonary artery to vertebral body and bronchial lumen to pulmonary artery ratios in Dirofilaria immitis-infected cats with and without selamectin administration.

Species:
cat
Breathing & coughCats

Plain-English summary

A group of cats infected with heartworms (Dirofilaria immitis) showed changes in their lung and airway structures when examined with high-resolution CT scans. The study found that certain measurement ratios (bronchial lumen to vertebral body and pulmonary artery to vertebral body) were better at identifying lung problems than the commonly used bronchial lumen to pulmonary artery ratio. Cats that were treated with selamectin had fewer and less severe changes compared to untreated cats. This suggests that monitoring these specific ratios can help veterinarians assess lung disease in heartworm-infected cats more accurately.

People also search for: cat heartworm symptoms · heartworm treatment for cats · cat lung disease diagnosis

Abstract

Objectives The bronchial lumen to pulmonary artery (BA) ratio is utilized to evaluate pulmonary pathology on CT images. The BA ratio may be unreliable when changes are present in bronchial and pulmonary arteries concurrently. Bronchial lumen to vertebral body (BV) and pulmonary artery to vertebral body (AV) ratios have been established in normal cats and may serve as an alternative. This study aimed to evaluate the BV, AV and BA ratios in cats before and after infection with Dirofilaria immitis, with and without selamectin administration, and to characterize the distribution of disease. Methods Archived CT images were reviewed from three groups of cats: D immitis-infected untreated (n = 6); infected pretreated with selamectin (n = 6); and uninfected untreated (n = 5). The BV, AV and BA ratios were calculated for all lung lobes for baseline (D0) and day 240 (D240) postinfection. Ratios and percentage change from baseline were compared between lobes and between groups. Results BV and AV ratios were more consistent in identifying abnormalities when disease was present in bronchial and arteries concurrently than BA ratios. Infected untreated cats had significant changes in both BV and AV ratios and percentage change from baseline. Abnormal BV and AV ratios were noted in the infected selamectin group, although less widely distributed. Conclusions and relevance The BV and AV ratios more accurately identified bronchial and pulmonary artery abnormalities in D immitis-infected cats. Both bronchial and pulmonary artery changes were present in infected cats, decreasing the diagnostic application of the BA ratio. Pulmonary artery changes were more widely distributed than bronchial changes in the lung. Heartworm-infected cats receiving selamectin had bronchial and pulmonary artery changes but to a lesser extent than untreated heartworm-infected cats. The CT-derived BV and AV ratios are a useful measure to evaluate lung disease of cats.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28994629/