Abstract

Feline intracranial abscessation or empyema is infrequently reported in the veterinary literature. To date, the largest study is based on a population of 19 cats with otogenic infection. The aim of this study was to review a larger population of cats with intracranial empyema from multiple aetiologies and document their signalment, imaging findings, treatment protocols (including medical and/or surgical management) and to compare outcomes. Cases presenting to a single referral centre over a 10 year period with compatible history, neurological signs and imaging findings consistent with intracranial abscessation and empyema were reviewed retrospectively. Twenty-three cats met the inclusion criteria. Advanced imaging (CT and/or MRI) was performed in 22/23 cats; one case was diagnosed via ultrasound. Ten cases underwent medical and surgical management combined, 10 underwent solely medical management and three were euthanased at the time of diagnosis. Short-term outcome showed that 90% of surgically managed and 80% of medically managed cats were alive at 48 h post-diagnosis. Long-term survival showed that surgically managed cases and medically managed cases had a median survival time of 730 days (range 1-3802 days) and 183 days (range 1-1216 days), respectively. No statistical significance in short- or long-term survival ( P >0.05) was found between medically and surgically managed groups. Feline intracranial abscessation and empyema are uncommon conditions that have historically been treated with combined surgical and medical management. This study documents that, in some cases, intracranial abscessation and empyema can also be successfully treated with medical management alone.

Highlights

  • Intracranial abscessation and intracranial empyema arise as a consequence of bacterial infection within the cranial cavity.[1,2] IA and IE is infrequently seen in cats

  • Treatment modalities consist of medical treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics and supportive care, or combined medical and surgical intervention via craniectomy.[3,4,5,11]

  • The aim of this study is to describe medical and surgical treatment protocols for IA and IE and compare their effect on short and long-term survival in feline patients

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Intracranial abscessation (intra-axial collection of purulent material, IA) and intracranial empyema (suppuration within a pre-existing anatomical cavity, IE) arise as a consequence of bacterial infection within the cranial cavity.[1,2] IA and IE is infrequently seen in cats. Infection originating from local extension (eg, adjacent spread from the eyes, ears and sinuses), haematogenous spread, secondary to trauma (eg, skull fractures, penetrating foreign bodies) and iatrogenic infection are reported in the literature.[3,4,5,6,7]. These cases present with a wide range of neurological deficits due to the inflammatory response induced by the bacteria and/or secondary mass effect. IA and IE are severe and life-threatening diseases requiring emergency intervention; mortality rates as high as 100% have been reported.[8,10] Treatment modalities consist of medical treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics and supportive care, or combined medical and surgical intervention via craniectomy.[3,4,5,11] Little information is currently available as to which treatment modality carries the most favourable prognosis

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call