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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Severe anemia in pregnant cats can signal uterine torsion needing

By Kimura, Shogo et al.·Published in The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne·2024·Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Recognizing uterine torsion as a differential diagnosis in pregnant cats with severe anemia to provide appropriate and timely care in the absence of a definitive presurgical diagnosis.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A pregnant 8-month-old domestic longhair cat was brought in for severe anemia after being lethargic for two days. Despite various tests not revealing the cause, an ultrasound showed one healthy and six nonviable fetuses along with fluid in the uterus. The vet performed a blood transfusion and an emergency C-section, which revealed a twisted uterine horn with dead fetuses. After surgery, the cat recovered well. It's important for pet owners to know that uterine torsion can cause severe anemia and requires quick surgical intervention.

People also search for: pregnant cat severe anemia · cat uterine torsion symptoms · cat C-section recovery

Abstract

A pregnant female domestic longhair cat ~8 mo of age was referred to the Western College of Veterinary Medicine (Saskatoon, Saskatchewan) for a diagnostic evaluation of severe anemia (PCV: 10.8%) after a 2-day period of lethargy. A CBC, serum biochemistry profile, FeLV/FIV testing, and abdominal radiographs were completed and did not determine a cause for the anemia. Abdominal ultrasonography identified 1 viable and 6 nonviable and fetuses, anechoic fluid in the uterus, and a mild volume of peritoneal effusion. A whole-blood transfusion and C-section with ovariohysterectomy were performed even though a definitive presurgical diagnosis for the anemia had not yet been established. Exploratory surgery revealed a left uterine horn torsion with a necrotic base, severe congestion, and 7 nonviable fetuses. Following surgery, the queen made a full clinical recovery. Key clinical message: Uterine torsion can be easily overlooked as a cause of severe anemia due to the relative infrequency of this condition in cats and the low sensitivity of ultrasonography to provide a definitive presurgical diagnosis. Client communication must emphasize the need for a prompt surgical intervention to establish the diagnosis and to save the cat, despite poor rates of neonatal survival. Once the animal is stabilized after surgery, further diagnostic tests and procedures are indicated if the cause of anemia has not yet been identified.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38694738/