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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat with severe head trauma and broken ear bone after accident

By Sanroman-Llorens, Fidel et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2020·Centro Cl&#xed, Spain·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Traumatic Tympanic Bulla Fracture in a Cat With Severe Head Trauma.

Species:
cat
Movement & jointsCats

Plain-English summary

A 9-year-old male European shorthair cat was brought to the vet after being hit by a car, showing severe facial swelling, breathing problems, and multiple fractures in the jaw and face. After stabilizing him, the vet performed a CT scan, which revealed fractures in the right tympanic bulla (a part of the ear) along with other facial fractures. The cat underwent surgery to fix the jaw fractures and had his injured eye removed. Four months later, follow-up scans showed that the fractures were healing well, and the cat made a full recovery without any neurological issues.

People also search for: cat head trauma treatment · cat facial fractures recovery · tympanic bulla fracture in cats

Abstract

A nine-year-old male European shorthair cat was referred to our practice with severe head trauma after suffering a road traffic accident (RTA). The patient presented marked facial swelling and multiple skin wounds and bruising, inspiratory dyspnea, palpable mandibular and maxillary fractures, serosanguinolent oronasal discharge and right eye exophthalmos and buphthalmos with loss of menace and pupillary reflex. After stabilizing the patient, a CT scan was performed under general anesthesia and an oesophagostomy tube was placed. The scan revealed the presence of multiple right tympanic bulla fractures. Multiple mandibular, maxillary, and palatine fractures were also present. The cat underwent surgery. Mandibular symphyseal separation and maxillary fractures were stabilized using intraoral cerclage wire fixation reinforced with composite and the right eye was enucleated. The rest of the fractures were treated conservatively. A CT scan 4 months after the trauma was also performed. At this point, the maxillofacial fractures were healing properly, and a bone callus demonstrating fusion of fragments of the right tympanic bulla was evident. There was absence of abnormal content inside the right tympanic bulla. The patient recovered uneventfully with no neurological deficits. To the author's knowledge this is the first case reporting a traumatic tympanic bulla fracture in the cat with case follow up, and the first case reported using CT as diagnostic imaging test.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32850992/