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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Oxygen use and heart function in dogs with sepsis compared to healthy

By Butler, Amy L & Campbell, Vicki L·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2010·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Assessment of oxygen transport and utilization in dogs with naturally occurring sepsis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 5-year-old mixed-breed dog was diagnosed with sepsis, a serious infection that can affect the body's ability to transport oxygen. The dog's oxygen delivery was found to be significantly lower than that of healthy dogs, but other measures of heart function were similar. The study compared dogs with sepsis to those with a related condition called nonseptic systemic inflammatory response syndrome (nSIRS) and found that dogs with sepsis had better heart function than those with nSIRS. Unfortunately, the study did not determine which dogs with sepsis would survive based on these measurements.

People also search for: dog sepsis symptoms · how to treat sepsis in dogs · dog heart function tests · mixed-breed dog infection treatment

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare cardiac index (CI), oxygen delivery index (D(O(2))I), oxygen extraction ratio (O(2)ER), oxygen consumption index (V(O(2))I), and systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) in dogs with naturally occurring sepsis with published values for healthy dogs; compare those variables in dogs with sepsis that did or did not survive; and compare CI and D(O(2))I in dogs with sepsis with values in dogs with nonseptic systemic inflammatory response syndrome (nSIRS). DESIGN: Cohort study. ANIMALS: 10 dogs with naturally occurring sepsis and 11 dogs with nSIRS. PROCEDURES: Over 24 hours, CI, D(O(2))I, O(2)ER, V(O(2))I, and SVRI were measured 4 and 5 times in dogs with sepsis and with nSIRS, respectively. The mean values of each variable in each group were compared over time and between groups; data for dogs with sepsis that did or did not survive were also compared. RESULTS: Mean D(O(2))I was significantly decreased, and mean CI, O(2)ER, V(O(2))I, and SVRI were not significantly different in dogs with sepsis, compared with published values for healthy dogs. Mean CI and D(O(2))I in dogs with sepsis were significantly greater than values in dogs with nSIRS. Among dogs with sepsis that did or did not survive, values of CI, D(O(2)I), O(2)ER, V(O(2))I, and SVRI did not differ significantly. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Compared with values in healthy dogs, only D(O(2))I was significantly lower in dogs with sepsis. Values of CI and D(O(2))I were significantly higher in dogs with sepsis than in dogs with nSIRS, suggesting differing degrees of myocardial dysfunction between these groups.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20632789/