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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Thymectomy surgery and anesthesia care in a cat with myasthenia gravis

By Spadavecchia, C & Jaggy, A·Published in Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde·2008·Department of Clinical Veterinary Medicine University of Berne·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Thymectomy in a cat with myasthenia gravis: a case report focusing on perianaesthetic management.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old male Persian cat with myasthenia gravis (a condition that causes muscle weakness) was scheduled for surgery to remove a suspected thymoma (a type of tumor). Before the operation, the cat showed signs of weakness in its back legs and had reduced eye reflexes. The veterinary team used a special anesthesia plan to avoid muscle relaxants, ensuring the cat could breathe properly during surgery. After the procedure, the cat needed extra oxygen to help with breathing but recovered well overall.

People also search for: cat myasthenia gravis treatment · Persian cat surgery recovery · thymoma in cats · cat breathing problems after surgery

Abstract

An 8 years old male persian cat with a diagnosis of myasthenia gravis was scheduled for transternal thoracotomy. An anterior mediastinal mass, suspected to be a thymoma, had to be resected. Progressive paraparesis and reduced ocular reflexes and menace response were the main clinical features. At the preoperative examination the cat appeared free of significant myocardial or respiratory diseases. The possibility of compromised respiratory function due to muscle weakness was addressed by the choice of a balanced anesthesia protocol without the use of muscle-relaxants. Intravenous induction was followed by intubation, administration of isoflurane in oxygen and ventilatory support. Thorough cardiorespiratory monitoring was performed during anaesthesia. Epidural morphin was given to reduce the amount of inhalation agent required to maintain anaesthesia and supplemental intravenous analgesia was given. At the end of the surgery, intrapleural bupivacaine was administered to help controlling poststernotomy pain, while reducing the need for systemic analgesics. Although rapid returning of swallowing reflex and spontaneous breathing followed the disconnection from the anaesthetic circuit, the cat needed to breath oxygen enriched air to maintain a normal hemoglobin saturation in the early postoperative phase.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18821511/