Per rectal portal scintigraphy in the diagnosis and management of feline congenital portosystemic shunts

J Small Anim Pract. 1996 Jan;37(1):7-11. doi: 10.1111/j.1748-5827.1996.tb01925.x.

Abstract

Five cats with a congenital portosystemic shunt (CPSS) were examined using transcolonic portal scintigraphy before and after surgical ligation of the shunting vessel. The mean shunt index before surgery was 52 per cent (range 45 to 61 per cent). Repeat portal scintigraphy, six to eight weeks after surgery, indicated a significant reduction in shunt index (mean 13 per cent, range 5 to 25 per cent) in four cats. In one of these cats a marked reduction in the shunt index, as determined by scintigraphy, preceded normal fasting blood ammonia. In the fifth cat there was no significant change in the shunt index, fasting serum bile acids and blood ammonia six months after surgery, although its clinical signs of hepatic encephalopathy had improved. Portal scintigraphy is useful in the diagnosis of CPSS and enables a quantitative assessment of the effects of surgery and may be a more accurate indicator of the degree of shunting after surgery than blood ammonia and serum bile acids.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Ammonia / blood
  • Animals
  • Bile Acids and Salts / blood
  • Cat Diseases / diagnosis*
  • Cat Diseases / diagnostic imaging*
  • Cat Diseases / surgery
  • Cats
  • Congenital Abnormalities / diagnosis
  • Congenital Abnormalities / diagnostic imaging
  • Congenital Abnormalities / veterinary*
  • Female
  • Hepatic Encephalopathy / blood
  • Hepatic Encephalopathy / physiopathology
  • Hepatic Encephalopathy / veterinary
  • Male
  • Portal System / abnormalities*
  • Portal System / diagnostic imaging*
  • Portal System / surgery
  • Radionuclide Imaging

Substances

  • Bile Acids and Salts
  • Ammonia