Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Cutting and balloon treatment for severe lung valve narrowing in 7
By Markovic, L E & Scansen, B A·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2019·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A pilot study evaluating cutting and high-pressure balloon valvuloplasty for dysplastic pulmonary valve stenosis in 7 dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
Seven dogs with severe pulmonary valve dysplasia, which caused breathing problems and heart issues, underwent a new procedure combining cutting balloon dilation and high-pressure balloon valvuloplasty. After the treatment, the dogs showed significant improvement, with a 46% average reduction in pressure gradients that indicate how hard their hearts had to work. There were no serious complications during the procedure, and the dogs were monitored for up to 35 months afterward. This approach appears to be a safe and effective option for managing this heart condition in dogs, but more research is needed to confirm long-term benefits.
People also search for: dog pulmonary valve stenosis treatment · dog heart problems symptoms · cutting balloon valvuloplasty for dogs
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: This case series describes early experience and technical aspects of cutting balloon dilation followed by high-pressure balloon pulmonary valvuloplasty in dogs with dysplastic pulmonary valve stenosis. ANIMALS: Seven client-owned dogs were enrolled in this study. METHODS: Dogs were prospectively enrolled based on echocardiographic diagnosis of severe pulmonary valve dysplasia, defined as marked valve thickening with variable degrees of annular hypoplasia or subvalvar fibrous obstruction and a peak echocardiography-derived transpulmonary pressure gradient higher than 100 mmHg. Preinterventional and postinterventional hemodynamic data and transthoracic pressure gradients were obtained for all dogs. Recheck echocardiography varied in timing by client convenience, with maximum follow-up 35 months after intervention. RESULTS: No intraprocedural or periprocedural mortality was observed. The only major complication was partial avulsion of a cutting blade related to exceeding recommended burst pressure of the device, which was not associated with obvious clinical consequence. Invasive hemodynamic measurements demonstrated an average reduction of 46% in peak systolic right ventricular-to-pulmonary artery pressure gradient (range, 31-77%). The echocardiographic results 24 h after procedure demonstrated an average reduction in pressure gradient of 43% (range, 20-66%), with late follow-up demonstrating an average reduction of 35% (range, 10-57%) compared with preprocedural echocardiography. CONCLUSIONS: This procedure is a feasible therapeutic transcatheter intervention for dogs with dysplastic pulmonary valves and appears safe in this small cohort. The ideal selection criteria and rate of restenosis for this procedure is under investigation, and long-term follow-up and a large, randomized, controlled study are necessary to demonstrate efficacy.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31675525/