Feline Ultrasound Case Study
Question
A 5 year old domestic short hair cat presents with a 24 hour history of lethargy, anorexia and severe tachypnoea.
Following a physical examination and after initial stabilisation in an oxygen chamber, basic thoracic ultrasound and echocardiography views are obtained.
- What are the main ultrasonographic findings on the image below?
- What is your differential diagnosis at this stage?
Answer
The first scan shows loss of the normal lung appearance (soft tissue-air interface) which is substituted by a diffuse hypoechogenicity (fluid) and floating pleural tissue. The diagnosis is severe pleural effusion.
Differential diagnosis includes a pure transudate (e.g. due to hypoalbuminaemia), a modified transudate (e.g. due to neoplasia, diaphragmatic hernia or congestive heart failure), a pyothorax (due to bacterial infection), a non-septic exudate (e.g. FIP), a chylothorax (e.g. due to cardiac disease, neoplasia or idiopathic) and a haemothorax (due to trauma, neoplasia or coagulopathy).
The second scan is a right parasternal short axis view at the level of the aorta and the left atrium. There is evidence of severe left atrial enlargement with an Aorta/Left atrium ratio markedly above 1.6.
There is evidence of left sided heart disease leading to congestive heart failure (pleural effusion). The most likely disease for a patient of this age is a primary cardiomyopathy such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or restrictive cardiomyopathy. Congenital cardiac disease or secondary cardiomyopathies (e.g. hyperthyroidism) are much less likely.
A full echocardiographic examination (after thoracocentesis) should be carried out as the next step. This should be followed by medical therapy for congestive heart failure.