feline infectious peritonitis

Orchitis in a Cat Associated with Coronavirus Infection

Journal of Comparative Pathology
Volume 124, Issues 2–3, February 2001, Pages 219-222

O. G. Sigurdardottir, Ø. Kolbjørnsen and H. Lutz

Abstract

A case of severe, pyogranulomatous and necrotizing orchitis in a cat, which later succumbed to systemic feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), is described. The 3·5-year-old cat, positive for feline immunodeficiency virus infection, presented with a left testicular enlargement. A few months after castration the animal was humanely destroyed due to declining health. Post-mortem examination revealed inflammatory lesions in abdominal organs and in the brain compatible with FIP. Infection was confirmed with a reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction test and by immunohistochemical demonstration of coronavirus antigen in the affected tissues, including the left testicle. FIP is usually a systemic disease. However, lesions and presenting clinical signs in a single organ system such as the brain are not uncommon. The results of this case study indicate that orchitis, although rare, should be on the list of lesions of FIP.

Keywords

coronavirus antigen, orchitis, feline infectious peritonitis,