Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with partial blindness from brain tumor treated by surgery
By Goulle, Frédéric et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2011·Clinique Vé, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Intracranial meningioma causing partial amaurosis in a cat.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A neutered male domestic cat was brought in with a 10-month history of worsening vision and changes in behavior. After thorough examinations and a CT scan, the vet found a large tumor pressing on the brain, which was diagnosed as an intracranial meningioma. The cat underwent surgery to remove the tumor, and just ten days later, his vision and behavior had significantly improved. Ten months after the surgery, follow-up tests showed no signs of the tumor returning and the cat had no visual deficits.
People also search for: cat vision problems · cat brain tumor surgery · cat behavior changes · cat amaurosis treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe a case of intracranial meningioma causing visual impairment in a cat, successfully treated by surgery. PROCEDURES: An adult neutered male domestic cat was referred with a 10-month history of progressive visual impairment and altered behavior. Investigations included physical, ophthalmologic and neurological examinations as well as hematology, serum biochemistry and CT scan of the head. RESULTS: The menace response was absent in the left eye and decreased in the right eye. Electroretinograms were normal on both eyes, as was ophthalmic examination, ruling out an ocular cause and allowing a presumptive diagnosis of partial amaurosis due to a post-retinal lesion. CT scan demonstrated a large sessile extra axial mass along the right parietal bone and thickening of the adjacent bone. Cerebrospinal fluid was not collected because high intracranial pressure represented a risk for brain herniation. A right rostrotentorial craniectomy was performed to remove the tumor. Ten days after surgery, vision was improved, neurological examination was normal and normal behavior was restored. Ten months after surgery, ophthalmological examination showed no visual deficit and CT scan did not reveal any sign of recurrence. CONCLUSION: Advanced imaging techniques allow veterinarians to detect early cerebral diseases and to provide specific treatment when it is possible. In cases of feline amaurosis due to intracranial meningioma, the vital prognosis is good while the visual prognosis is more uncertain, but recovery of normal vision and normal behavior is possible as demonstrated in the present case.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21923830/