Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with rectal prolapse treated by new transanal surgery
By Elena Carbonell Buj et al.·Published in JFMS open reports·2020·View original on Semantic Scholar →
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Original publication title: Rectal duplication in an adult cat: a novel transanal surgical approach
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 3-year-old male domestic shorthair cat was brought to the vet because he was straining and in pain while trying to poop, and he had a history of rectal prolapse that kept coming back. After trying other treatments without success, the vet found a cystic mass in his rectum using a CT scan. They performed a new type of surgery to remove the cyst through the anus, which led to a diagnosis of rectal duplication (a rare condition where part of the rectum is duplicated). Thankfully, the surgery was successful, and the cat has shown no signs of problems for 18 months since the procedure.
People also search for: cat straining to poop · cat rectal prolapse treatment · cat rectal duplication surgery
Abstract
Case summary A 3-year and 8-month-old male entire European domestic shorthair cat was presented with a history of recurrent rectal prolapse, straining and pain when defaecating. Previous non-surgical and surgical treatments had not provided a satisfactory result. Rectal prolapse had recurred within 2 weeks of treatment. Upon clinical examination, an intraluminal mass could be palpated rectally. A CT scan examination revealed the mass was of a cystic nature and the cyst was surgically excised via a transanal approach. On histological evaluation, the cyst walls consisted of three of the layers of normal rectum: mucosa, muscularis of the mucosa and submucosa. These findings led to the definite diagnosis of rectal duplication. Relevance and novel information Enteric duplication is among the differential diagnoses for straining and rectal prolapse in cats. This condition has previously been discussed in the veterinary literature, with a single case report describing a rectal duplication in a cat. In that particular case, the authors described a perineal surgical approach. Here we present a novel approach whereby the duplicated material was excised transanally in order to limit intra- and postoperative morbidity. The clinical outcome was excellent in our case, with complete resolution of clinical signs and no recurrence 18 months after surgery.
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Search related cases →Original publication on Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/32528720