Beyond Lymphocytic-Plasmacytic IBD: Recognizing Eosinophilic Enteritis at Surgery
Sections of small intestinal wall revealed a marked eosinophilic infiltrate throughout the lamina propria. Eosinophils were present in high numbers in all sections examined, with infiltration extending into the crypts and disrupting the normal crypt architecture in areas. Villous blunting and crypt irregularity were present, consistent with chronic mucosal injury. The degree of eosinophilic infiltration was inconsistent with a reactive response to the foreign body alone — the distribution and severity indicated a pre-existing, active inflammatory process.
Mammary Carcinoma in a Male Cat: A Diagnosis Worth Not Missing
Male cats can develop mammary carcinoma. The diagnosis should be on the differential list for any mammary region mass in a male cat, regardless of neuter status. Given that the vast majority of feline mammary tumors are malignant, histopathology is not optional — cytology alone is unreliable for distinguishing benign from malignant mammary lesions in cats.

