Department of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine, Columbia, Missouri.
Department of Sciences Cliniques, Faculté de Médecine Vétérinaire, Université de Montréal, St-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada.
J Vet Intern Med. 2019 May;33(3):1201-1221. doi: 10.1111/jvim.15473. Epub 2019 Apr 13.
This Perspectives in Veterinary Medicine article seeks to define, describe putative causes, and discuss key diagnostic tests for primary and secondary bronchiolar disorders to propose a classification scheme in cats with support from a literature review and case examples. The small airways (bronchioles with inner diameters <2 mm), located at the transitional zone between larger conducting airways and the pulmonary acinus, have been overlooked as major contributors to clinical syndromes of respiratory disease in cats. Because the trigger for many bronchiolar disorders is environmental and humans live in a shared environment with similar susceptibility, understanding these diseases in pet cats has relevance to One Health. Thoracic radiography, the major imaging modality used in the diagnostic evaluation of respiratory disease in cats, has low utility in detection of bronchiolar disease. Computed tomography (CT) with paired inspiratory and expiratory scans can detect pathology centered on small airways. In humans, treatment of bronchiolar disorders is not well established because of heterogeneous presentations and often late definitive diagnosis. A review of the human and veterinary medical literature will serve as the basis for a proposed classification scheme in cats. A case series of cats with CT or histopathologic evidence of bronchiolar lesions or both, either as a primary disorder or secondary to extension from large airway disease or interstitial lung disease, will be presented. Future multi-institutional and multidisciplinary discussions among clinicians, radiologists, and pathologists will help refine and develop this classification scheme to promote early and specific recognition and optimize treatment.
这篇兽医医学视角文章旨在定义、描述疑似病因,并讨论原发性和继发性细支气管疾病的主要诊断测试,以期在文献回顾和病例示例的支持下为猫提出一种分类方案。位于较大传导气道和肺腺泡之间过渡区的小气道(内径<2mm 的细支气管),一直被忽视为猫呼吸疾病临床综合征的主要致病因素。由于许多细支气管疾病的诱因是环境性的,而人类和宠物猫生活在相似的环境中,因此了解宠物猫的这些疾病与“One Health”有关。在猫的呼吸疾病诊断评估中,主要的影像学检查方法是 X 线摄影,但对细支气管疾病的检测作用有限。带有吸气和呼气扫描的 CT 可以检测以小气道为中心的病变。在人类中,由于表现形式多样且通常确诊较晚,细支气管疾病的治疗尚未得到很好的确定。将对人类和兽医医学文献进行综述,作为猫提出的分类方案的基础。将呈现一组具有 CT 或组织病理学证据的猫的病例系列,这些猫的细支气管病变或两者兼有,无论是原发性疾病还是继发于大气道疾病或间质性肺病的扩展。未来,临床医生、放射科医生和病理学家之间的多机构和多学科讨论将有助于完善和发展这一分类方案,以促进早期和具体的识别,并优化治疗。