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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat body wall surgery using muscle flaps to repair tumor defect

By Kooner K & Rubiños C.·2024·Southfields Veterinary Specialists (Part of Linnaeus Veterinary Limited), United Kingdom·View original on Europe PMC

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Original publication title: Reconstruction of a body wall defect using diaphragm lateralisation and advancement, latissimus dorsi, and internal and external abdominal oblique muscle flaps in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A 12-year-old cat was brought in for a large mass on its side, which turned out to be a feline injection site sarcoma (FISS). The vet removed the mass along with some surrounding tissue and a rib, then used several muscle flaps to close the resulting hole in the cat's abdomen. After the surgery, the cat stayed in the hospital for three days and was able to return to normal activity with complete healing. There was a minor issue with bruising at the surgical site, but overall, the outcome was excellent.

People also search for: cat injection site sarcoma treatment · cat abdominal surgery recovery · feline muscle flap surgery

Abstract

<h4>Case summary</h4>A cat aged 12 years and 7 months was referred to a multidisciplinary hospital for investigation of feline injection site sarcoma (FISS) on the left thoracolumbar region. A CT examination of the mass revealed a multi-lobulated mass affecting the body wall, extending from the level of lumbar vertebrae L2 to L4. The mass was excised with 5 cm lateral margins, including resection of the 13th left rib, the caudal edge of the latissimus dorsi (LD) muscle, full-thickness abdominal wall and sections of the lumbar epaxial muscles. To reconstruct the defect, a combination of muscle flaps was used. This included diaphragmatic advancement and lateralisation, rotation of the LD, and creation of transposition flaps from the internal abdominal oblique and external abdominal oblique muscles, ensuring closure without tension. Skin closure required mobilising an inguinal flank fold flap. The cat was discharged from hospital 3 days postoperatively. Histopathology confirmed a diagnosis of FISS with clean wide margins. A gradual return to normal activity and complete healing of the surgical site was reported on follow-up, with one minor complication related to the skin flap (bruising at the base of the inguinal flank fold flap).<h4>Relevance and novel information</h4>This report describes the use of the aforementioned combination of muscle flaps to close a major abdominal wall defect in a cat with an excellent outcome. Practitioners can consider this technique when planning tissue reconstruction after FISS resection.

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Original publication on Europe PMC: https://europepmc.org/article/MED/39691671