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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How common is triaditis in cats with or without symptoms

By F. C. Fragkou et al.·Published in Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine·2016·View original on Semantic Scholar

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Original publication title: Prevalence and Clinicopathological Features of Triaditis in a Prospective Case Series of Symptomatic and Asymptomatic Cats

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats, including 27 with symptoms like vomiting or diarrhea and 20 without symptoms, were studied to see if they had a condition called triaditis, which involves inflammation in the intestines, liver, and pancreas. The researchers found that 47 cats had some form of inflammation, with 8 of the symptomatic cats having triaditis. This means they had issues in all three organs at once. The study suggests that if a cat shows severe signs of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), vets should consider the possibility of triaditis as well.

People also search for: cat vomiting and diarrhea · cat inflammatory bowel disease treatment · triaditis in cats symptoms

Abstract

Background The term triaditis designates the concurrent presence of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), cholangitis, and pancreatitis in cats. Hypothesis/Objectives The histopathology of concurrent, but often subclinical, inflammatory processes in the small intestine, liver, and pancreas of cats is poorly described. We aimed to investigate the frequency of enteritis, cholangitis, pancreatitis, or some combination of these in symptomatic and asymptomatic cats, compare clinicopathological features, and correlate histopathological with laboratory findings. Animals Domestic cats (27 symptomatic, 20 asymptomatic, and 8 normal). Methods Prospective study. Physical examination, laboratory variables (CBC, serum biochemistry profile, serum thyroxine concentration, serum feline trypsin‐like immunoreactivity [fTLI], feline lipase immunoreactivity [fPLI, as measured by Spec fPL ®], urinalysis, and fecal analysis), imaging, and histopathological examinations were conducted. Feline liver, pancreas, and small intestine were biopsied during laparotomy. Results Inflammatory lesions were detected in 47 cats (27 symptomatic, 20 asymptomatic). In total, 20 cats had histopathologic lesions of IBD (13/47, 27.7%), cholangitis (6/47, 12.8%), or pancreatitis (1/47, 2.1%) alone, or inflammation involving >1 organ (27/47, 57.4%). More specifically, 16/47 cats (34.0%) had concurrent lesions of IBD and cholangitis, 3/47 (6.4%) of IBD and pancreatitis, and 8/47 cats (17%) of triaditis. Triaditis was identified only in symptomatic cats (8/27, 29.6%). A mild, positive correlation was detected between the severity (score) of IBD lesions and the number of comorbidities (rho = +0.367, P = .022). Conclusions and Clinical Importance Histopathological evidence of IBD or IBD with comorbidities was detected in both symptomatic and asymptomatic cats. The possibility of triaditis should be considered in symptomatic cats with severe IBD.

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Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/27296565