Hernández Eduardo M, Ginel Pedro J, Blanco Beatriz, Millán Yolanda, Jiménez Maria T, Mozos Elena
Department of Animal Medicine and Surgery, University of Córdoba, Campus de Rabanales, Córdoba, Spain.
Department of Anatomy, Comparative Pathology and Toxicology, University of Córdoba, Campus de Rabanales, Córdoba, Spain.
JFMS Open Rep. 2025 Jan 6;11(1):20551169241303217. doi: 10.1177/20551169241303217. eCollection 2025 Jan-Jun.
A 13-year-old male castrated domestic shorthair cat presented with a 2-month history of progressive lameness, poor appetite and constipation. Physical examination revealed palpable lesions in muscles of several extremities. Ultrasound examination confirmed the presence of round lesions with a hypo- or anechoic centre within the muscles. These lesions were characterised by an anechoic, occasionally trabeculated, central area surrounded by a hyperechoic band with heterogeneous echotexture. In total, seven lesions affecting six appendicular muscles were detected in different evolution stages, as suggested by their sizes and ultrasonographic features. Fine-needle aspiration of the muscle lesions revealed nests and isolated pleomorphic large neoplastic cells consistent with a carcinoma (vs sarcoma) and one mass was surgically removed. The histological and immunohistochemical studies confirmed a diagnosis of metastatic urothelial carcinoma. Although this neoplasia typically originates from the urothelium of the urinary bladder or renal pelvis, the primary tumour could not be detected in repeated abdominal ultrasound examinations. The cat was euthanased and further evaluations were declined by the author.
Urothelial carcinoma is a rare and highly aggressive neoplasia in the cat. While metastasis to regional lymph nodes and lungs are common in cats and dogs, to the authors' knowledge, there have been no reports of metastasis to multiple appendicular muscles in cats. This clinical presentation should be considered in the differential diagnoses of multiple nodular or cystic lesions affecting long muscles in cats.
一只13岁已去势的家养短毛雄性猫出现进行性跛行、食欲不振和便秘2个月。体格检查发现多个肢体肌肉有可触及的病变。超声检查证实肌肉内存在圆形病变,中心为低回声或无回声。这些病变的特征是无回声的中央区域,偶尔有小梁,周围是回声增强带,回声纹理不均匀。根据病变大小和超声特征,总共在不同演变阶段检测到7个影响6条附属肌肉的病变。对肌肉病变进行细针穿刺,发现巢状和孤立的多形性大肿瘤细胞,符合癌(与肉瘤相对),并手术切除了一个肿块。组织学和免疫组化研究证实为转移性尿路上皮癌。虽然这种肿瘤通常起源于膀胱或肾盂的尿路上皮,但在多次腹部超声检查中未发现原发性肿瘤。猫实施了安乐死,作者拒绝了进一步评估。
尿路上皮癌在猫中是一种罕见且侵袭性很强的肿瘤。虽然猫和狗向局部淋巴结和肺转移很常见,但据作者所知,尚无猫转移至多条附属肌肉的报道。在猫长肌肉出现多个结节性或囊性病变的鉴别诊断中应考虑这种临床表现。