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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Steroid injections after esophagus widening helped a cat

By Ricart, María Cecilia et al.·Published in Open veterinary journal·2022·Universidad de Buenos Aires·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Intralesional steroid injection after endoluminal esophageal stricture dilatation in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 1-year-old spayed female mix-breed cat was brought in for recurring regurgitation after having two previous treatments for an esophageal stricture (a narrowing of the esophagus). After several balloon dilatation procedures to widen the stricture, the cat still had trouble swallowing. The veterinarian then injected a steroid (triamcinolone) into the area after the last balloon treatment. This combination of treatments allowed the cat to eat normally without any issues for 11 months after the procedures.

People also search for: cat regurgitation treatment · cat esophageal stricture · triamcinolone for cat swallowing problems

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Benign esophageal strictures arise from various etiologies, mostly severe esophagitis. Although endoscopic balloon dilation is still the first-line therapy, refractory or recurrent strictures do occur and remain a challenge to the endoluminal treatment. The aim of this report was to communicate a recurrent esophageal stricture resolution in a cat treated with balloon dilatation and steroid injections in Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina. CASE DESCRIPTION: A 1-year-old spayed mix-breed female cat was consulted to the Veterinary Endoscopy Service for recurring regurgitation after two previous esophageal dilations. The cat had received doxycycline forspp. infection and 20 days after the treatment consulted for dysphagia and regurgitation. Upper esophagogastroscopy (UGE) was performed with an Olympus CV-160 8.7 mm diameter endoscope; an annular 7 mm stricture was observed 3 cm caudal to the cranial esophagus sphincter. Three balloon dilatations procedures were performed with a Boston Scientific Controlled Radial Expansion (CRE) balloon 8-10-12 mm of 1 minute each. Because of ongoing clinical signs, another UGE was performed 15 days from the first procedure: a 3 mm stricture was encountered, balloon dilatation was repeated with 6-10-12 mm diameter, and a four-quadrant triamcinolone was injected in the submucosa. Clinically, the cat could eat with no alterations until day 20, where it started with mild dysphagia. Another UGE was performed, and the known stricture conserved a 11 mm diameter and balloon dilatation 12-15-16.5 mm with triamcinolone injection was repeated 30 days after the previous procedure. The cat could eat kibbles with no clinical signs in an 11-month follow-up. CONCLUSION: The alternative to triamcinolone injection after balloon dilatation presented in this clinical report was successful and it could be a therapeutic option for recurrent esophageal strictures in cats as it is in human medicine.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35603061/