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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Heart rate changes in normal dogs during treadmill walking

By Shull, Sarah A et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2021·College of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Heart Rate Changes Before, During, and After Treadmill Walking Exercise in Normal Dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of eight healthy large breed dogs had their heart rates measured while walking on a treadmill to understand how exercise affects their heart rates. The study found that heart rates increased significantly during exercise but returned to normal shortly after. Both a heart rate monitor and a Holter monitor effectively tracked these changes, helping veterinarians create safer and more effective exercise plans for dogs in rehabilitation. This information can be useful for pet owners to understand how their dog's heart responds to exercise.

People also search for: dog heart rate during exercise · treadmill exercise for dogs · heart monitor for dogs · dog rehabilitation exercise guidelines

Abstract

In dogs, changes in heart rate (HR) can reflect conditioning, fear, anticipation, and pain; however, these are not routinely assessed in veterinary rehabilitation patients. Knowing the expected HR changes during rehabilitation exercises can guide protocols and can optimize post-operative therapy. The primary objectives of the study were to assess HR in dogs undergoing treadmill exercise (TE) during the walk and to compare the three collection techniques of HR, namely, auscultation, a HR monitor (HR MONITOR), and a Holter monitor (HOLTER). We hypothesized that the HR would increase by 20% during TE, that HR taken after TE would not be the same as the HR during TE, and that all methods of measurement would have good agreement. HR was recorded in all methods simultaneously, in eight adult healthy large breed dogs during rest (REST), immediately before TE (PRE), during TE (WALK), and 15 and 60 s after TE (POST-15, POST-60). Statistical analyses included Spearman and Pearson correlations, Bland-Altman analyses, and a repeated measures ANOVA with Sidak'stest (significant at value of< 0.05). Increased HR was reflected in TE during WALK, and elevations in HR during WALK were not reflected in POST timepoints. Auscultation was also not possible during WALK. Significant moderate-to-strong correlations existed among all monitoring options at each of the timepoints (range = 0.5-0.9,< 0.05). There were no correlations between peak HR and age or weight. The main limitation of this study is that only healthy and large breed dogs were used. Both monitors captured the increase in HR during exercise and could guide TE regimens to minimize patient risk of injury and to maximize training effectiveness.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33912604/