Feline Medicine Q&A 07
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A 6-month-old neutered male Balinese cat presents with recent onset persistent regurgitation after feeding.
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What are the differential diagnoses? | There are many differential diagnoses for regurgitation, but they can broadly be divided into obstructive disorders (luminal, mural, and extramural), inflammatory disease, and motility disorders.
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What can be seen on the contrast oesophagram taken after the cat was offered food mixed with barium? Suggest a likely diagnosis. | The spot fluoroscopy film demonstrates accumulation of a barium bolus in the cervical and proximal thoracic oesophagus, cranial to a tapered area of barium typical of a stricture. The narrowed area is too far cranial to be due to a persistent right aortic arch. This cat had been anaesthetized for castration 2 weeks previously, and this was a post-anaesthetic (reflux) stricture. |
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What would be a suitable treatment regimen? | Optimal treatment for this case would be repeat balloon dilation of the stricture (several dilations may be required initially at 2–3 day intervals but less frequently as the condition improves), combined with medical therapy. This comprises a mucosal protectant (e.g. sucralfate), an H2-blocker (e.g. famotidine), anti-inflammatory doses of prednisolone, possibly colchicine (to inhibit fibrosis and stricture reformation), and a low-fat diet to encourage gastric emptying. |
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