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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Normal heart ultrasound measurements in healthy adult Maine Coon cats

By Drourr, Lori et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2005·Chesapeake Veterinary Cardiology Associates, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Measurement of M-mode echocardiographic parameters in healthy adult Maine Coon cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A study looked at the heart measurements of healthy adult Maine Coon cats to see how they compare to regular domestic cats. The researchers found that Maine Coons tend to have larger heart dimensions, which is important for vets to know when assessing their heart health. This means that if you have a Maine Coon, their heart size might be different from what is typical for other cats, and this could affect how a vet interprets echocardiogram results. Understanding these differences can help ensure that Maine Coons receive accurate evaluations of their heart health.

People also search for: Maine Coon cat heart size · echocardiogram results for cats · cat heart health differences

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine reference values for M-mode echocardiographic parameters in nonsedated healthy adult Maine Coon cats and compare those values with data reported for nonsedated healthy adult domestic cats. DESIGN: Prospective study. ANIMALS: 105 healthy adult Maine Coon cats. PROCEDURE: Over a 3-year period, M-mode echocardiographic examinations (involving a standard right parasternal transthoracic technique) were performed on Maine Coon cats as part of prebreeding evaluations; values of M-mode parameters in healthy individuals were collected, and mean values were calculated for comparison with those reported for healthy adult domestic cats. RESULTS: The mean +/- SD weight of Maine Coon cats was significantly greater than that of domestic cats. Mean values of left ventricular internal dimension at end diastole and end systole (LVIDd and LVIDs, respectively), interventricular septal thickness at end systole (IVSs), left ventricular posterior wall thickness at end systole (LVPWs), left atrial dimension at end systole (LADs), and aortic root dimension (Ao) in Maine Coon cats differed significantly from values in healthy domestic cats. The greatest differences detected between the 2 groups involved values of LVIDd, LADs, and Ao. Linear regression analysis revealed a weak but significant correlation between weight and each of LVIDd, LVPWs, IVSs, Ao, LADs, and left ventricular posterior wall thickness at end diastole. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Values of several M-mode echocardiographic parameters in Maine Coon cats differ from those reported for domestic cats; these differences should be considered during interpretation of echocardiographic findings to distinguish between cardiac health and disease in this breed.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15776945/