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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bronchial narrowing in coughing dogs with heart murmurs seen on CT

By Lebastard, Matthieu et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2021·Centre Hospitalier V&#xe9, France·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of bronchial narrowing in coughing dogs with heart murmurs using computed tomography.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of coughing dogs with heart murmurs was studied to see if their cough was related to heart problems or respiratory issues. The researchers found that these dogs had significant narrowing of their airways, particularly in the left-sided bronchi, which was linked to an enlarged heart. This suggests that the size of the heart can worsen coughing in dogs with murmurs. Understanding this connection can help veterinarians better diagnose and treat coughing in dogs with heart issues.

People also search for: dog coughing heart murmur treatment · why is my dog coughing · enlarged heart in dogs symptoms · bronchial narrowing in dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The origin of cough in dogs with heart murmurs is controversial, because the cough could be primary cardiac (eg, pulmonary edema, bronchi compression by left-sided cardiomegaly) or respiratory (eg, bronchomalacia, other bronchial or bronchiolar disease, interstitial lung disease) in origin. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To study the association between left atrium (LA) dilatation and cardiomegaly and bronchial narrowing in coughing dogs with heart murmurs using computed tomography (CT). ANIMALS: Twenty-one client-owned coughing dogs with heart murmurs and 14 historical control dogs. METHODS: Dogs with cough and murmur were prospectively recruited over 4 months. Cervical and thoracic radiography, echocardiography, and thoracic CT were performed in enrolled dogs. Control dogs, with no disease on thoracic CT and no records of heart murmur and coughing, were gathered from the institution's computerized database. Degree of bronchial narrowing was assessed using the bronchial-to-aorta (Ao) ratio, measured by 3 radiologists blinded to the clinical findings. After identifying bronchi that were significantly narrowed in dogs with murmur compared to controls, the relationship between degree of narrowing and LA/Ao ratio (measured echocardiographically) and vertebral heart scale (VHS) measured radiographically was studied in dogs with murmur using mixed-effects regression. RESULT: Significant narrowing was identified for all left-sided bronchi and the right principal, middle, and caudal bronchi in the coughing dogs, compared with controls. Increasing LA size and VHS were significantly inversely associated with diameter for all left-sided and right-sided bronchi indicated above. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Results indicate an association between LA enlargement and cardiomegaly and bronchial narrowing and support heart size-associated exacerbation of cough in dogs with murmurs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33811698/