Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with sunken chest and breathing trouble treated with surgery
By R. Yaygingül et al.·2017·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Pectus excavatum in a cat: a case report
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
An 8-month-old female cat was brought in because she was having trouble breathing. After some tests, the vet found that she had a condition called pectus excavatum, where the breastbone is sunken in. To fix this, the vet performed surgery and used a special splint to help reshape her chest. After five weeks, the splint was taken off, and two months later, the cat was back to normal and breathing well again.
People also search for: cat breathing problems · pectus excavatum treatment in cats · cat surgery recovery time
Abstract
This case report aims to clinically and radiologically describe a case of feline pectus excavatum and to evaluate the treatment results. An 8-month-old female cat weighing 3.2 kg was presented to the Surgery Clinic, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Adnan Menderes University with respiratory distress. Following radiographic and clinical examinations, the condition was diagnosed as pectus excavatum. Surgical correction was performed using a U-shaped external splint. Post-operative thoracic radiography showed that the concavity of the sternum was reduced. The splint was removed five weeks post-surgery. Two months after surgery, the cat was clinically normal.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/b60c8caa2280dc0db209cb4a4e6ccad632e56bed