Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Influence of the Respiratory Cycle on Caudal Vena Cava Diameter Measured by Sonography in Healthy Foals: A Pilot Study.
- Journal:
- Journal of veterinary internal medicine
- Year:
- 2017
- Authors:
- Tuplin, M C et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Veterinary Clinical and Diagnostic Sciences · Canada
- Species:
- horse
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intravascular volume assessment in foals is challenging. In humans, intravascular volume status is estimated by the caudal vena cava (CVC) collapsibility index (CVC-CI) defined as (CVC diameter at maximum expiration [CVC] - CVC diameter at minimal inspiration [CVC])/CVC× 100%. HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVES: To determine whether the CVC could be sonographically measured in healthy foals, determine differences in CVCand CVC, and calculate inter- and intrarater variability between 2 examiners. We hypothesized that the CVC could be measured sonographically at the subxiphoid view and that there would be a difference between CVCand CVCvalues. ANIMALS: Sixty privately owned foals <1-month-old. METHODS: Prospective study. A longitudinal subxiphoid sonographic window in standing foals was used. The CVCand CVCwere analyzed by a linear mixed effect model. Inter-rater agreement and intrarater variability were expressed by Bland-Altman and intraclass correlation coefficients, respectively. RESULTS: Measurements were attained from 58 of 60 foals with mean age of 15 ± 7.9 days and mean weight of 75.7 ± 17.7 kg. The CVCwas significantly different from CVC(D = 0.515, SE = 0.031, P < 0.001). Inter-rater agreement of the CVC-CI differed by an average of -0.9% (95% limits of agreement, -12.5 to +10.7%). Intrarater variability of CVCwas 0.540 and 0.545, of CVCwas 0.550 and 0.594, and of CVC-CI was 0.894 and 0.853 for observers 1 and 2, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: These results indicate it is possible to reliably measure the CVC sonographically in healthy foals, and the CVC-CI may prove useful in assessing the intravascular volume status in hypovolemic foals.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28766820/