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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with tracheal melanoma causing breathing trouble and cyanosis

By Mendes, Ricardo E et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc·2026·Department of Pathology, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Tracheal melanoma in a cat.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old spayed female domestic shorthair cat was brought in after experiencing severe breathing difficulties, including cyanosis (a bluish tint to the skin), wheezing, and shortness of breath for eight days. X-rays and a tracheoscopy revealed a large mass in the middle of her trachea, which was obstructing her airway. Unfortunately, despite the findings, the cat passed away due to the complications from the tracheal melanoma, a rare type of tumor in the trachea.

People also search for: cat breathing problems · tracheal tumor in cats · cat melanoma treatment · why is my cat wheezing · cat cyanosis causes

Abstract

Extraocular melanocytic neoplasms are rare in cats and occur mainly in the skin and oral cavity. Tracheal neoplasms are also rare in cats, with lymphoma being the most commonly reported tumor. Here, we describe a tracheal melanoma in an 8-y-old spayed female domestic shorthair cat that died after 8 d of cyanosis, dyspnea, and wheezing. Radiographic and tracheoscopy findings were consistent with a mid-tracheal obstruction. Gross findings consisted of a poorly demarcated, pale-yellow, 28 × 16 × 15-mm mass that effaced and expanded most of the mid trachea and partially occluded the tracheal lumen. Histologically, the mass was a poorly demarcated neoplasm that effaced the tracheal mucosa, submucosa, hyaline cartilage, and muscle layer and was partially surrounded by the tracheal adventitia. The tumor infiltrated and disrupted the tracheal cartilage and partially occluded the tracheal lumen. Neoplastic cells were elongate or polygonal and arranged in interweaving bundles or well-defined groups supported by a delicate stroma. Nuclei were round-to-oval and often irregular, with finely stippled chromatin with a prominent nucleolus. Rare neoplastic cells had brown cytoplasmic pigment that was black on Fontana-Masson stain. The mitotic count was 11 in 2.37 mm(10 FN22/40× fields). Neoplastic cells had cytoplasmic immunolabeling for melan-A and PNL2, consistent with a diagnosis of melanoma.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41772429/