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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cat in shock after a month missing - how a blood transfusion saved

By Oron, Liron et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)·2017·Department of Small Animal Emergency and Critical Care·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Ultrasound-guided intracardiac xenotransfusion of canine packed red blood cells and epinephrine to the left ventricle of a severely anemic cat during cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

An 8-year-old female cat was brought in after being missing for a month and was found to be severely weak and anemic due to a massive flea infestation. Unfortunately, she went into cardiac arrest shortly after arriving at the clinic. Since it was difficult to start an IV, the veterinary team used ultrasound to inject canine packed red blood cells directly into her heart, along with a dose of epinephrine. This emergency treatment successfully restarted her heart, and she later received more blood through an IV. Remarkably, the cat was discharged three days later and was doing well three months after the incident.

People also search for: cat cardiac arrest treatment · cat anemia symptoms · emergency blood transfusion for cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the use of an ultrasound-guided intracardiac xenotransfusion of canine packed red blood cells (pRBC) to the left ventricle of a severely anemic cat during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). CASE SUMMARY: An 8-year-old previously healthy neutered female cat was presented with severe weakness after she had disappeared for 1 month. On presentation, the cat was in hypovolemic shock, laterally recumbent, and severely anemic with massive flea infestation. Within minutes of admission, the cat became agonal and suffered cardiopulmonary arrest. CPR was immediately initiated; however, attempts to gain IV access during CPR were unsuccessful. As the cat's blood type was yet unknown, 10 mL of canine pRBC was transfused directly into the left ventricular chamber using ultrasound guidance, as well as 0.02 mg/kg of epinephrine using a similar technique. The cat regained cardiac activity and once the jugular vein was cannulated it received 20 additional mL of canine pRBC intravenously. The packed cell volume and total plasma protein following the intracardiac transfusion were 0.09 L/L [9%] and 30 g/L [3.0 g/dL], respectively. Subsequent blood typing revealed the cat had type B blood. The cat was discharged 3 days post-CPR and was alive and doing well 3 months following discharge. NEW OR UNIQUE INFORMATION PROVIDED: This is the first reported case of ultrasound-guided intracardiac canine-to-feline xenotransfusion during CPR.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28072500/