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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Interventional cardiology for the criticalist.

Journal:
Journal of veterinary emergency and critical care (San Antonio, Tex. : 2001)
Year:
2011
Authors:
Scansen, Brian A
Affiliation:
Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences · United States

Plain-English summary

This study looks at serious heart problems in small animals that often need immediate treatment. Conditions like fluid around the heart (pericardial effusion), slow heart rates (symptomatic bradycardia), and severe heartworm infections (caval syndrome) are highlighted. Diagnosing these issues usually involves physical exams, ultrasounds, and heart monitoring. Treatments can include draining fluid from around the heart, using temporary devices to help with slow heart rates, or urgently removing heartworms. The chances of recovery depend on the specific condition; while some treatments have good outcomes, caval syndrome can be very serious if not treated quickly.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To review indications, procedures, and prognosis for common cardiovascular emergencies requiring intervention in small animals. ETIOLOGY: Pericardial effusion, symptomatic bradycardia, and heartworm-induced caval syndrome are examples of clinical scenarios commonly requiring intervention. Pericardial effusion in small animals occurs most frequently from cardiac neoplasia, idiopathic pericarditis, or congestive heart failure. Indications for temporary pacing include transient bradyarrhythmias, ingestions resulting in chronotropic incompetence, and emergency stabilization of critical bradyarrhythmias. Caval syndrome results from a large dirofilarial worm burden, pulmonary hypertension, and mechanical obstruction of right-sided cardiac output with resultant hemolysis and organ dysfunction. DIAGNOSIS: The diagnosis of pericardial effusion is suspected from signalment and physical findings and confirmed with cardiac ultrasound. Symptomatic bradycardias often present for syncope and definitive diagnosis derives from an ECG. Caval syndrome is diagnosed upon clinical, hematologic, and ultrasonographic evidence of severe heartworm infestation, cardiovascular compromise, and/or mechanical hemolysis. THERAPY: Pericardial effusion is alleviated by pericardiocentesis in the emergency setting, though may require further intervention for long-term palliation. Temporary transvenous pacing can be performed emergently to stabilize the symptomatic patient with a bradyarrhythmia. Dirofilariasis leading to caval syndrome requires urgent heartworm extraction. PROGNOSIS: The prognosis for pericardial effusion is dependent upon the underlying etiology; the prognosis for cardiac pacing is favorable, and the prognosis for caval syndrome is grave if untreated and guarded to fair if heartworm extraction is performed.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21463439/