Affiliation:
1. Animal Emergency Service Tanawha Queensland Australia
Abstract
AbstractThe aim of this study is to describe a case of haemoglobinuria in a cat after near‐drowning.A 6‐year‐old male neutered domestic short hair cat weighing 6.5 kg with a pre‐existing seizure disorder presented to an emergency hospital after near‐drowning in a swimming pool during a seizure episode. On presentation, the patient was obtunded, dyspnoeic, bradycardic and hypothermic. Imaging revealed evidence of severe bilateral pulmonary infiltrates. Treatment with intravenous diazepam, amoxicillin, fluid therapy, active warming and oxygen therapy was administered. The cat developed haemoglobinuria approximately 6 h after nearly drowning. Despite improvements in mentation, pulse quality and heart rate, respiratory compromise and poor oxygen saturation persisted, prompting euthanasia approximately 10 h after admission.To the author's knowledge, this is the first reported clinical case of haemoglobinuria following near‐drowning in veterinary medicine.