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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Late onset cerebellar degeneration causing ataxia in a 9-year-old cat

By Negrin, Arianna et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2006·Department of Public Health, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Late onset cerebellar degeneration in a middle-aged cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 9-year-old male Persian cat was brought in for progressive loss of coordination (ataxia) that had been worsening over the past two years. The vet found that the cat had severe ataxia in all four legs and other neurological issues. Tests showed that the cat had a rare condition called cerebellar degeneration, which affects the brain's ability to coordinate movement. Unfortunately, this condition is uncommon in older cats, and there is no specific treatment to reverse the damage. The cat's condition was diagnosed, but it may require supportive care to manage symptoms.

People also search for: cat ataxia treatment · Persian cat neurological problems · late onset cerebellar degeneration in cats

Abstract

Cerebellar degeneration (abiotrophy) (CD) is a spontaneous and accelerated degeneration of one or several mature cerebellar neuronal cell populations and has been described in many domestic animals, especially in dogs, with numerous breed-related cases. In cats, CD is mentioned as a rare sporadic entity. Late onset CDs are exceptionally uncommon and only two cases are reported in young adults, both aged 18 months. This report describes clinical and pathological findings of a late onset feline CD in a 9-year-old male Persian cat. The cat was presented with a history of progressive ataxia lasting 2 years. Neurological examination revealed severe neurological deficits such as generalised and severe ataxia, hypermetria in all four limbs, and bilateral absence of menace response. The lesion was diffusely localised in cerebellum. On gross pathology, the cerebellum appeared of normal size and shape and kidneys were characterised by mild hyperaemia. Histologically, lesions were limited to the cerebellum and kidneys. In the cerebellum, all cerebellar folia of both hemispheres and the vermis were affected. Changes were characterised by severe and diffuse loss of Purkinje cells, loss of cellularity in the granular layer, mild astrogliosis associated with moderate hypertrophy of Bergmann's glia. Immunohistochemistry for feline parvovirus antigen revealed a negative result. Renal lesions consisted of chronic fibrosis associated with chronic interstitial nephritis. CD is a rare disease and occurs commonly in puppies or young animals, who are clinically normal at birth and usually develop neurological signs within a few weeks or months after birth. This report represents the first case of CD in a middle-aged cat.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16781880/