“…infections. Nevertheless, the cat liver fluke infection has been previously reported in a jaundiced cat with dehydration, alopecia, anorexia, prostration, abdominal enlargement and slightly hyperthermic with normal heart and respiratory rate (Ikhwan-Saufi et al, 2020). Lesion-wise, the gross pathology and hepatic injury caused by P. fastosum infections are distended gallbladder with fluke infestation, enlarged, fatty, yellow-ish and friable liver, dilated and thickened bile ducts, cholestasis (V ieira et al, 2009), cholangitis, intense periductal fibrosis, periductal inflammatory infiltrate, destruction and loss of bile ducts, severe cholangiohepatitis and obstructive biliary cirrhosis (Soto et al, 1991;Day, 1995;Center, 1996;Headley et al, 2012;Daniel et al, 2012, Ramos et al, 2017.…”