Symptomatic partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection in a kitten.
Tung HsuehChung-Chun YangShiun-Long LinI Ping ChanPublished in: Journal of veterinary internal medicine (2020)
A 3-month-old intact female American Shorthair cat, with syncope and tachypnea, underwent cardiac examination which identified no heart murmur or gallop. Thoracic radiography disclosed mild generalized enlargement of the cardiac silhouette and a bronchial and interstitial pattern throughout the lungs. Echocardiography identified tubular structures near the left atrium. After agitated saline contrast imaging, persistent left cranial vena cava with unroofed coronary sinus was suspected. Computed tomography angiography showed the right cranial, right caudal and left caudal pulmonary veins draining into the coronary sinus and flowing into the right atrium. The left cranial pulmonary vein drained normally into the left atrium. Partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection (PAPVC) was diagnosed. The kitten was treated with diuretics but died of heart failure 2 months later. Permission for necropsy was not granted. This case represents symptomatic PAPVC in a kitten. Most pulmonary veins were connected abnormally with the coronary sinus. The prognosis was grave because of refractory heart failure.
Keyphrases
- vena cava
- pulmonary hypertension
- heart failure
- inferior vena cava
- coronary artery
- pulmonary artery
- left ventricular
- pulmonary embolism
- coronary artery disease
- atrial fibrillation
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- computed tomography
- spinal cord
- magnetic resonance imaging
- left atrial appendage
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- acute heart failure
- endothelial cells
- newly diagnosed
- catheter ablation
- mass spectrometry
- aortic valve