Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How common are harmless heart murmurs in healthy Whippets
By Bavegems, Valérie C et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2011·Department of Medicine and Clinical Biology of Small Animals·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Detection of innocent systolic murmurs by auscultation and their relation to hematologic and echocardiographic findings in clinically normal Whippets.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 105 healthy Whippets were checked for heart murmurs, and it was found that nearly half of them (about 48%) had soft systolic murmurs, particularly at the aortic valve. These murmurs are considered innocent, meaning they are not linked to any heart problems or structural issues. The study showed that factors like the dog's sex, whether they were bred for racing or showing, and their training status did not affect the presence of these murmurs. Overall, the dogs with murmurs had higher blood flow rates but remained healthy without any heart disease.
People also search for: Whippet heart murmur · innocent heart murmur in dogs · signs of heart problems in Whippets
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine murmur prevalence by auscultation of 105 apparently healthy Whippets without signs of cardiac disease, to determine the origin of these murmurs, and to evaluate the influence of sex, type of pedigree (ie, bred for showing or racing), and training on these murmurs. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. ANIMALS: 105 client-owned Whippets. PROCEDURES: All dogs were auscultated by the first author and underwent a complete physical and cardiological examination, together with a hematologic assessment. Several RBC variables and echocardiographic variables were compared between dogs with or without a murmur at the level of the aortic valve. RESULTS: 44 of 105 (41.9%) dogs had no murmur. A soft systolic murmur was present with point of maximal intensity at the level of the aortic valve in 50 (47.6%) dogs, at the level of the pulmonic valve in 8 (7.6%) dogs, and at the level of the mitral valve in 3 (2.9%) dogs. No significant differences were found in heart rate, rhythm, murmur presence, point of maximal intensity, and murmur grade between males and females, between dogs with race- and show-type pedigrees, or between dogs in training and not in training. Dogs with a murmur at the level of the aortic valve had a significantly higher aortic and pulmonic blood flow velocity and cardiac output, compared with dogs without a murmur. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Whippets have a high prevalence of soft systolic murmurs in the absence of any structural abnormalities, which fit the description of innocent murmurs. No influence of sex, pedigree type, or training was found on the occurrence of these murmurs in Whippets.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21320016/