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Cat Disorders and Diseases
Lung and Airway Disorders of Cats
Lung Flukes in Cats
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Topics in Lung and Airway Disorders of Cats
  • Introduction to Lung and Airway Disorders of Cats
  • Accumulation of Fluid or Air in the Chest Cavity of Cats
  • Allergic Pneumonitis in Cats
  • Bronchitis in Cats
  • Cancers and Tumors of the Lung and Airway in Cats
  • Diaphragmatic Hernia in Cats
  • Emphysema in Cats
  • Feline Respiratory Disease Complex (Feline Herpesviral Rhinotracheitis, Feline Calicivirus)
  • Laryngitis in Cats
  • Lung Flukes in Cats
  • Lungworm Infection in Cats
  • Nasopharyngeal Polyps in Cats
  • Paralysis of the Larynx in Cats
  • Pharyngitis in Cats
  • Pneumonia in Cats
  • Pulmonary Edema in Cats
  • Rhinitis and Sinusitis in Cats
  • Tonsillitis in Cats
  • Tracheobronchitis (Bronchitis, Bronchial Asthma) in Cats
 
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Lung Flukes in Cats

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The adult flukes Paragonimus kellicotti and Paragonimus westermani usually live in cysts or bulla, primarily in the lungs of cats. They also have been found rarely in other organs or the brain. Infection is most common in China, southeast Asia, and North America. The eggs from the adult flukes, are coughed up, swallowed, and passed in the feces. The life cycle includes several snails as the first intermediate host and crayfish or crabs as the second. Cats become infected by eating raw crayfish or crabs that contain the encysted parasite. The young flukes eventually migrate to the lungs where they become established.

Infected animals may have a chronic, deep, intermittent cough and eventually become weak and lethargic, although many infections pass unnoticed. A diagnosis is based on finding the characteristic eggs in feces or coughed-up material. The location of the flukes in the lungs is determined by x-ray. Several drugs provide effective treatment for lung fluke infections.

Last full review/revision July 2011 by Ned F. Kuehn, DVM, MS, DACVIM; Stuart M. Taylor, PhD, BVMS, MRCVS, DECVP; Neil W. Dyer, DVM, MS, DACVP; Joe Hauptman, DVM, MS, DACVS

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