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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Signs, treatment, and survival of dogs with atrial standstill

By Sanz-Gonzalez, I et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2024·Hospital for Small Animals, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical presentation, management, and survival in dogs with persistent atrial standstill in the United Kingdom.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 3-year-old dog diagnosed with persistent atrial standstill (PAS) was brought in after experiencing fainting spells (syncope). The dog received an artificial pacemaker to help regulate its heart rhythm. While the fainting episodes improved, the dog's heart continued to show signs of enlargement and other complications developed over time. Despite these challenges, many dogs like this one had a good long-term survival rate after getting the pacemaker, with an average survival time of over four years.

People also search for: dog fainting spells treatment · persistent atrial standstill in dogs · dog pacemaker survival rate

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the clinical and echocardiographic presentation of dogs with persistent atrial standstill (PAS), identify variables measured at first presentation that could predict their survival, and document the progression of the disease after pacing. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Retrospective study of medical records of dogs diagnosed with PAS at three referral hospitals of the United Kingdom over seven years. RESULTS: Twenty-six dogs were diagnosed with PAS during the study period. Median age of the population was three years (range: seven months-12.5 years). The most common clinical sign was syncope (14/26). Twenty-four dogs received artificial pacemakers (PM). Major complications after PM implantation were observed in four dogs (four/24). Serial echocardiographic examinations showed that cardiac dimensions of PAS dogs with left atrial or left ventricular dilation at first presentation did not return to reference range after pacing. Further dilation of the cardiac chambers, recurrence of congestive heart failure (CHF), or development of new episodes of CHF were documented in seven, four, and 10 PAS dogs, respectively, despite pacing. Median survival time for cardiac-related deaths after PM implantation was 1512 days (18-3207). Neither CHF nor echocardiographic variables at presentation predicted survival after PM implantation in PAS dogs. CONCLUSIONS: Persistent atrial standstill (PAS) is an uncommon bradyarrhythmia, occurring in young adult dogs. Affected dogs were often presented with syncope. Whilst syncope resolved, cardiac remodeling persisted after PM implantation. Long-term survival was favorable after PM implantation and was not predicted by congestive status or cardiac chamber size at first presentation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38150959/