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Extended patient care report for an unstable acromegalic cat with hypoglycaemia

02 July 2018
10 mins read
Volume 9 · Issue 6
Figure 1. Critical monitoring sheet.
Figure 1. Critical monitoring sheet.

Abstract

This report highlights the complications associated with acromegalic patients in diabetic crisis, and suggests recommendations for the appropriate management and care. Outlined are the concepts of asymptomatic hypoglycaemia, the welfare implications of frequent pinna blood sampling and coma scale monitoring. It also discusses the benefit of using the nursing process for ongoing evaluation of the critical patient.

The patient presented to the hospital collapsed and unresponsive. He was a known diabetic patient, and was already undergoing treatment for his diabetes.

Species: Feline

Breed: Domestic Long Haired

Age: 14 years 3 months

Gender: Male (neutered)

Weight: 4.8 kg

The patient had previously been diagnosed with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). He had been confirmed as acromegalic (with a high insulin-like growth factor 1 concentration), and had also been noted to have a heart murmur, and International Renal Interest Society stage 2 chronic kidney disease (IRIS, 2013). He was found collapsed in the morning by his owner who, suspecting hyperglycaemia, administered a subcutaneous insulin glargine (Lantus, Sanofi Aventis) injection and presented him to the practice.

The cat presented collapsed, comatose and hypothermic with a temperature of 32.2°C (reference range: 37.8–39.0°C), and constricted pupils. He had a gallop rhythm with a grade 1/6 systolic murmur and pulse deficits, although he had good pulse quality with a heart rate of 180 beats per minute (reference range: 140–220 bpm). He had no other abnormalities detected on physical examination with the veterinary surgeon (VS). Thoracic auscultation was clear with a respiratory rate of 28 breaths per minute (brpm) (reference range: 20–30 brpm), pink and tacky mucous membranes with a capillary refill time of 1–2 seconds (reference range: 1–2 seconds).

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