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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with heart failure caused by high eosinophil levels and heart

By Beaumier, A et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2022·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Hypereosinophilic syndrome with cardiac infiltration and congestive heart failure in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old male domestic shorthair cat was brought to the emergency vet for breathing difficulties. The vet found a heart murmur and signs of fluid around the lungs and heart. Tests showed a high level of eosinophils (a type of white blood cell) and heart issues, including an enlarged left atrium and thickened heart valves. Unfortunately, despite treatment, the cat went into cardiac arrest and could not be revived. A thorough examination after death revealed severe heart inflammation and damage caused by the eosinophils.

People also search for: cat breathing problems · cat heart murmur · hypereosinophilic syndrome in cats · cat heart failure treatment

Abstract

Hypereosinophilic syndrome is an uncommon disorder in the cat. It is a heterogeneous group of conditions defined by a persistent hypereosinophilia associated with organ damage directly attributable to tissue hypereosinophilia. A seven-year-old castrated domestic shorthair cat presented to the emergency service for dyspnea. Initial physical examination identified the presence of a grade III/VI systolic left parasternal murmur with no gallop or arrhythmia. A snap N-terminal-pro hormone brain natriuretic peptide was abnormal, and a point-of-care ultrasound revealed mild pleural effusion, scant pericardial effusion, and an enlarged left atrium. There was leukemia (72.35 K/uL, reference range 4.5-15.7 K/uL) predominated by eosinophilia (33.84 K/uL; reference range 0-1.9 K/uL). On echocardiogram, there was concentric hypertrophy of the left ventricular walls with irregular endocardial borders. The left atrium was enlarged with evidence of spontaneous echogenic contrast. The mitral valve was thickened with a vegetative lesion on the anterior leaflet. Despite treatment, the patient experienced cardiopulmonary arrest, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was unsuccessful. Complete necropsy with histopathology revealed eosinophilic infiltrates in multiple organs and the presence of a severe, acute-on-chronic, fibrinous, and eosinophilic-granulomatous endomyocarditis with mural thrombosis and marked endocardial fibrosis. This case represents an unusual presentation of the hypereosinophilic syndrome in the cat with cardiac involvement and congestive heart failure as a primary clinical sign.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35123345/