Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Long-term management of Eisenmenger syndrome in a dog with heart
By Barbara Bruno et al.·Published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science·2024·Department of Veterinary Science, University of Turin, Grugliasco, TO, Italy, CH·View original on DOAJ →
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Original publication title: Case report: Eisenmenger syndrome in a dog with ventricular septal defect: long term management and complications
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 9-month-old female Jack Russell Terrier was brought to the vet after experiencing two episodes of fainting. Tests showed she had a large hole in her heart (ventricular septal defect) causing serious complications known as Eisenmenger syndrome, which led to thickened blood. The vet started her on sildenafil, a medication that helped manage her condition for over four years without needing blood removal. In November 2023, she had surgery for a closed pyometra (a serious uterine infection) but recovered well after the operation. Overall, sildenafil was effective and well-tolerated throughout her treatment.
People also search for: dog fainting episodes · Jack Russell Terrier heart problems · sildenafil for dogs · dog pyometra surgery recovery
Abstract
A 9-month-old female Jack Russell Terrier was referred because of two episodes of suspected syncope. Echocardiography revealed a large, isolated mid-muscular ventricular septal defect (7 mm) with bidirectional shunting. A diagnosis of Eisenmenger syndrome and erythrocytosis (68.5% of hematocrit) was made and sildenafil therapy (0.5 mg/Kg twice daily) was initiated. Regular follow-up examinations were performed and Sildenafil therapy was gradually increased based on changes in clinical signs, packed cell volume and heart rate. The dog's clinical conditions have been stable without the need of phlebotomy for 4 years and 6 months, until April 2021 (month 74) (about 7 years of survival) when the dog had 80% of hematocrit and signs of hyperviscosity syndrome. The dosage of administered sildenafil reached gradually 6 mg/Kg DIE (2 mg/Kg three times a daily) in June 2022. Lastly, in November 2023 a closed pyometra was diagnosed and the dog was hospitalized and operated. The major concerns in the peri-operative period were hypotension and the profound hypoxemia, but the dog was discharged and recovered normal activity in approximately 11 days. This report describes the long-term management with sildenafil citrate of Eisenmenger syndrome secondary to a muscular ventricular septal defect with right-to-left shunting in a dog. Sildenafil therapy was always well tolerated with no side effects reported, even at higher dosage and drastically reduced the need for phlebotomy.
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Search related cases →Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2024.1393919