Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cat with septic heart sac infection linked to uterine infection
By Majoy, Sean B et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)·2013·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Septic pericarditis in a cat with pyometra.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A 6-year-old female Ragdoll cat was brought to the vet after showing signs of extreme tiredness, not eating, and having vaginal discharge for a week. Tests revealed fluid around her heart and an infection likely caused by bacteria from her uterus, which was confirmed to have a condition called pyometra (a serious infection of the uterus). The vet performed a procedure to drain the fluid from her heart and then surgically removed her infected uterus. After treatment with fluids and antibiotics, the cat recovered well and is doing much better now.
People also search for: cat lethargy and not eating · Ragdoll cat vaginal discharge · pyometra treatment in cats · septic pericarditis in cats · cat heart fluid treatment
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe a unique cause of septic pericarditis in a cat and detail the successful case management strategy. CASE SUMMARY: A 6-year-old sexually intact female Ragdoll cat was evaluated for a 7-day history of progressive lethargy, anorexia, and vaginal discharge. Thoracic radiographs revealed a markedly globoid cardiac silhouette and pleural effusion while the initial echocardiogram showed moderate volume pericardial effusion. Following pericardiocentesis, cytologic evaluation of the pericardial effusion revealed septic suppurative inflammation with intra- and extracellular Gram-negative rod-shaped bacteria. Abdominal ultrasound demonstrated a moderate amount of echogenic uterine fluid accumulation with a right-sided uterine horn mass. After stabilization with pericardiocentesis, IV fluid therapy and IV antimicrobials, the cat underwent ovariohysterectomy and partial pericardiectomy. Histopathology confirmed a diagnosis of pyometra and septic pericarditis. Uterine and pericardial fluid bacterial culture yielded Escherichia coli with identical antimicrobial sensitivity spectrums. NEW OR UNIQUE INFORMATION PROVIDED: Septic pericarditis is a rare cause of pericardial effusion in the cat. Previous reported cases have either suggested the cause to be secondary to transient bacteremia resulting from a local infection seeding the pericardium or for the cause to remain unknown. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first veterinary report of septic pericarditis resulting from hematogeneously spread bacteria originating from a urogenital infection. It is also the first report of successful surgical management of septic pericarditis in the cat.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23279042/