Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with daily vomiting treated for pancreatic cyst by laparoscopy
By Brückner, Michael·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2019·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Laparoscopic omentalization of a pancreatic cyst in a cat.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 15-year-old spayed female domestic shorthair cat was brought in for daily vomiting that had lasted a year. After tests and an ultrasound, the vet found a cyst on the pancreas. The cyst was drained and treated with a procedure called omentalization, which helps support the area around the cyst. While the vomiting improved for a short time after surgery, it returned gradually over the next six months, though less frequently than before. The original cyst disappeared, but smaller cysts formed later, and the cat was diagnosed with chronic pancreatitis, which likely caused the cysts.
People also search for: cat vomiting treatment · pancreatic cyst in cats · chronic pancreatitis in cats · cat surgery for cysts
Abstract
A 15-year-old spayed female domestic shorthair cat was examined because of a 1-year history of daily vomiting, which was not associated with food intake.Initial physical examination findings and serial hematologic and serum biochemical results were unremarkable except for the presence of a grade 2/6 left-sided heart murmur and persistent mild azotemia. A well-defined multilobulated cystic structure located between the spleen and left kidney was identified by abdominal ultrasonography.Laparoscopic exploration revealed that the cystic structure originated from the left pancreatic limb. With laparoscopic guidance, the structure was percutaneously drained and underwent omentalization. Then, a partial cystectomy was performed to obtain a tissue specimen for histologic evaluation. The vomiting resolved for a short period immediately after surgery and then gradually resumed over 6 months, albeit with less frequency than prior to surgery. The histologic diagnosis was pancreatic cyst. Abdominal ultrasonography performed 6 months after surgery revealed that the original cyst had completely resolved but multiple smaller cysts had developed. The serum feline pancreas-specific lipase activity was not measured before surgery but remained increased from the reference limit following surgery, and chronic pancreatitis was considered the most likely cause of pancreatic cyst formation.Laparoscopic-guided drainage and omentalization of a large pancreatic cyst resulted in a satisfactory outcome for the cat of this report and can be considered an alternative to percutaneous ultrasound-guided cyst drainage and the more invasive laparotomy approach for pancreatic cystectomy with or without omentalization.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31260401/