Peritoneopericardial diaphragmatic hernia in a healthy adult feline (Felis catus domesticus): diagnosis to surgical treatment - Case report
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Keywords

congenital anomaly, surgery, echocardiogram.

How to Cite

de Souza Campos, A. C., Rabaça dos Santos, L. ., Elisio Torres, F. ., Rossetto Marques, J. L. ., Lopes Martini, C. ., Franco de Sá Menezes, S. ., Moscatel Fevrier, G. ., & Horta Gomes, V. (2021). Peritoneopericardial diaphragmatic hernia in a healthy adult feline (Felis catus domesticus): diagnosis to surgical treatment - Case report. Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Medicine, 43(1), e001820. https://doi.org/10.29374/2527-2179.bjvm001820

Abstract

Peritoneopericardial diaphragmatic hernia (PPDH) is a communication between the abdomen and the pericardial sac generated by congenital anomalies triggered during diaphragmatic and pericardial development. This report aimed to present the case of an adult, mixed-breed cat, affected by PPDH, focusing on the period from diagnosis to successful surgical correction. The patient had a capricious appetite and weight loss for about four months and started, at the end of this period, a state of apathy. On abdominal ultrasound, the gallbladder (GB) was close to the heart, suggesting diaphragmatic discontinuity. On thoracic radiography, there were changes suggestive of PPDH, pericardial efusion or cardiomegaly with probable dilated cardiomyopathy. Based on these findings, an echocardiogram was performed, highlighting the hepatic lobe and GB internally to the pericardium, causing cardiac compression, although without severe cardiac changes. During surgery, a diaphragmatic defect of 4 cm in diameter was observed with the congested right medial hepatic lobe and hyperemic GB in the pericardial sac. The defect was sutured using the sultan pattern in separate stitches and polyamide threads. The feline returned to feeding with greater interest soon after the surgery, and after 15 days it was fed with dry food and had normal behavior. PPDH can be diagnosed in healthy adult cats, even if there are no apparent respiratory, gastrointestinal, or cardiac signs. The echocardiogram is relevant in the definitive diagnosis, in addition to excluding differential diagnoses, and simple surgical treatment with polyamide thread and sultan suture is successful.

https://doi.org/10.29374/2527-2179.bjvm001820
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References

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Copyright (c) 2021 Ana Carolina de Souza Campos, Lucas Rabaça dos Santos, Fernando Elisio Torres, Juliana Letícia Rossetto Marques, Caroline Lopes Martini, Stéfani Franco de Sá Menezes, Gabriela Moscatel Fevrier, Viviane Horta Gomes