Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Can echocardiography check heart function in dogs with mitral valve
By Bonagura, J D & Schober, K E·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2009·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Can ventricular function be assessed by echocardiography in chronic canine mitral valve disease?
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A dog with chronic mitral valve disease, a common heart problem, can show signs of heart failure, like coughing or difficulty breathing. Veterinarians use echocardiography (an ultrasound of the heart) to check how well the heart is functioning and to see if the heart valves are working properly. While this test can help assess heart function and predict the risk of congestive heart failure, it can be complicated by other factors like age and pressure changes in the heart. More advanced testing methods are needed to improve the accuracy of these assessments.
People also search for: dog heart failure symptoms · echocardiogram for dog mitral valve disease · heart problems in dogs treatment
Abstract
Mitral regurgitation (MR) related to chronic degenerative valvular disease is the most important cause of heart failure in dogs. Ultrasound examination of the heart can identify valve lesions, confirm the presence of valvular regurgitation, document cardiac remodeling, estimate intracardiac pressures, and quantify systolic ventricular function. These findings can influence prognosis or selection of medical therapy. Reductions in ventricular systolic function may be detected on serial echocardiographic examinations in some dogs with MR. However the changes in ventricular loading that accompany MR often complicate these measurements. For example, shortening and ejection fractions are often increased in severe MR, even in the setting of congestive heart failure. Echocardiography with Doppler is also used to assess ventricular diastolic function and filling pressures. This information helps predict the risk of congestive heart failure. However these findings are often rendered ambiguous by age-related impairment of ventricular relaxation, elevations in left atrial pressure due to MR, and effects of volume overload on myocardial tissue velocities. These factors limit the usefulness of ventricular filling and tissue velocities, as well as derived ratios such as the E/E' ratio, for predicting congestive heart failure in MR. More advanced Doppler and tissue echocardiographic methods, as well as prospective clinical studies, are needed to reduce the ambiguity involved with assessment of ventricular function and filling pressures in the setting of MR.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19765216/