JFMS Open Reports | 2021

Congenital pituitary cyst resulting in adipsic central diabetes insipidus and secondary hypernatremia in a cat

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Case summary A 9-month-old intact female domestic mediumhair cat presented with a 5-month history of obtundation, lethargy, hypernatremia (181\u2009mmol/l; reference interval [RI] 151–158\u2009mmol/l), hyperchloremia (142\u2009mmol/l; RI 117–126\u2009mmol/l), azotemia (blood urea nitrogen 51\u2009mg/dl; RI 18–33\u2009mg/dl), creatinine 3.0\u2009mg/dl (RI 1.1–2.2\u2009mg/dl), hyperphosphatemia (8.3\u2009mg/dl; RI 3.2–6.3\u2009mg/dl) and total hypercalcemia (11.4\u2009mg/dl; RI 9–10.9\u2009mg/dl), with concurrent polyuria with adipsia. Neurologic evaluation revealed proprioceptive deficits, and this finding paired with a history of focal seizure-like activity despite improving sodium concentrations suggested a cerebrothalamic lesion. For this reason, and historical and biochemical findings consistent with adipsic diabetes insipidus (DI), MRI of the brain was performed, which revealed a lesion of the hypophyseal fossa consistent with a pituitary cyst. Given the patient’s age and the timeline of clinical signs, a congenital pituitary cyst was strongly suspected. The patient was managed initially with intravenous fluids to correct the hypernatremia, then managed for more than 4 years with topical ocular desmopressin acetate administration and free water administered through a feeding tube. This cat’s clinical diagnosis included a congenital pituitary cyst with subsequent central DI and primary adipsia. Relevance and novel information The clinical presentations of primary adipsia or central DI are both rare in cats. This is the first report to describe these conditions occurring in a cat owing to a congenital pituitary cyst and describes successful long-term management of this condition.

Volume 7
Pages None
DOI 10.1177/2055116921990294
Language English
Journal JFMS Open Reports

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