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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with low thirst and high sodium after suspected baby head injury

By Paulin, Mathieu Victor et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2023·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Hypodipsic hypernatremia after long-standing polydipsia in a cat with suspect neonatal head trauma.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 16-month-old neutered male domestic shorthair cat was brought in for sudden muscle weakness and trouble walking after having excessive thirst and urination for a long time. The vet found that the cat was not drinking water, which led to high sodium levels in the blood, a condition called hypodipsic hypernatremia. An MRI showed serious brain abnormalities likely caused by past head trauma, affecting areas that control thirst and urine production. The cat's condition was linked to these brain issues, and while the exact treatment wasn't detailed, addressing the underlying brain problems is crucial for recovery.

People also search for: cat muscle weakness · cat excessive thirst and urination · cat brain injury symptoms · hypodipsic hypernatremia treatment

Abstract

A 16-month-old neutered male domestic shorthair cat weighing 2.7 kg was referred for further evaluation of acute generalized muscle weakness and paraparesis after a long-standing history of polyuria-polydipsia. The diagnosis of hypodipsic/adipsic hypernatremia relied on the key findings of absent spontaneous drinking despite hypernatremia and a hyperosmolar state (444.8 mOsm/kg, reference interval 280 to 310 mOsm/kg). Brain MRI revealed severe multifocal anatomic anomalies of the rostral calvarium and the forebrain, suggestive of encephaloclastic porencephaly. Involvement of the thalamic and hypothalamic regions could have been responsible for the cat's adipsic hypernatremia. The unique aspects of this case were the rare description of central nervous system disease leading to hypodipsia, and the history of chronic polydipsia before the acute onset of hypodipsia. Key clinical message: Multifocal abnormalities of the forebrain can present with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome, hypodipsia/adipsia, or both, depending on the stage of the disease. This likely happens when the hypothalamic and thalamic regions are affected, since they regulate antidiuretic hormone release and thirst, respectively.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37915774/