Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery Open Reports (Sep 2022)

Ventral cervical subcutaneous species fungal granuloma in a cat

  • Courtney Bartels,
  • Alejandro Alvarez-Sanchez,
  • Bharadhwaj Ranganathan,
  • T William O’Neill,
  • Katy L Townsend

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20551169221121916
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

Case summary An 8-year-old domestic longhair cat was evaluated for a right ventral subcutaneous cervical mass. Serial bloodwork and contrast-enhanced cranial and thoracic CT initially lacked ethmoturbinate lysis and showed a progressive, vascularized, right ventral cervical mass involving local lymph nodes. The mass was removed surgically on two occasions. Histopathology and fungal culture were diagnostic for a recurring sclerosing fungal granuloma and pyogranulomatous and eosinophilic lymphadenitis, consistent with Aspergillus species. The cat was treated with oral itraconazole; however, owing to the owner’s non-compliance in administering the medication and disease progression, the cat was humanely euthanized 3 years after diagnosis. Relevance and novel information The development of a cervical subcutaneous fungal granuloma of Aspergillus species in a domestic longhair cat before obvious maxillary, orbital or ethmoturbinate lysis on initial diagnostics is rare and suggests an early onset of lymphatic or hematogenous spread from a suspected nidus of infection within the sinonasal cavity.