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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with spinal tumor causing leg weakness treated with surgery

By Hans, Eric C et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2018·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Long-term outcome following surgical and radiation treatment of vertebral angiomatosis in a cat.

Species:
cat
Brain & nervesCats

Plain-English summary

A 2-year-old male domestic shorthair cat was brought in for difficulty walking in the back legs, which had been getting worse over six weeks. After tests and an MRI, the vet found a mass on the spine that was pressing on the spinal cord. The cat underwent surgery to relieve the pressure, followed by radiation therapy to treat the mass. Remarkably, the cat fully regained its ability to walk, and follow-up exams 26 months later showed no signs of problems returning.

People also search for: cat back leg weakness · cat spinal surgery recovery · cat radiation therapy outcome

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION A 2-year-old 5.2-kg (11.4-lb) neutered male domestic shorthair cat was referred because of a 6-week history of progressive paraparesis. CLINICAL FINDINGS Neurologic examination revealed moderate ambulatory paraparesis with marked spinal hyperesthesia at the thoracolumbar junction. The lesion was localized to the T3-L3 spinal cord segment. Clinicopathologic testing, thoracic radiography, and abdominal ultrasonography revealed no abnormalities to explain the observed clinical signs. Advanced spinal imaging with MRI revealed an extradural right-lateralized mass originating from the L2 vertebral pedicle and causing severe spinal cord compression. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME Surgical decompression was achieved by performance of a right-sided hemilaminectomy at L2. Histologic examination of biopsy samples obtained from the mass revealed an ill-defined zone of mature vascular proliferation extending through the preexisting vertebral bone, consistent with vertebral angiomatosis. After surgical recovery, adjuvant radiation therapy was initiated with a total dose of 48 Gy administered in 16 fractions of 3 Gy each over a 3-week period. Neurologic function rapidly improved to full ambulation with only minimal monoparesis of the right pelvic limb. Results of neurologic and MRI examination performed 26 months after surgery indicated no change in neurologic status or evidence of recurrence. CLINICAL RELEVANCE To the authors' knowledge, this report was the first to describe the long-term outcome for vertebral angiomatosis in a cat. Surgical decompression and radiation therapy provided an excellent outcome in this case. Vertebral angiomatosis should be considered as a differential diagnosis for any young cat with thoracolumbar myelopathy secondary to a mass associated with the vertebral pedicle.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30668256/