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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Heart muscle thickening linked to long-term phenylpropanolamine

By Hanson, Kayla R & Ware, Wendy AĀ·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical AssociationĀ·2018Ā·View original on PubMed →

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Original publication title: Myocardial hypertrophy associated with long-term phenylpropanolamine use in a dog.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 9-year-old spayed female Dalmatian was brought in because she was having trouble walking with her back legs. She had been taking a medication called phenylpropanolamine (PPA) for nearly 8.5 years to manage urinary incontinence. After surgery for a back issue, she developed a fast heart rate and showed signs of heart muscle thickening. The vet treated her with a heart medication called sotalol, and her heart condition improved after stopping PPA. However, when PPA was restarted later, her heart problems returned, and she eventually developed kidney issues. It's important for dogs on long-term PPA to be monitored for heart problems.

People also search for: Dalmatian back leg weakness Ā· dog heart problems from medication Ā· urinary incontinence treatment for dogs Ā· phenylpropanolamine side effects in dogs

Abstract

CASE DESCRIPTION A 9-year-old spayed female Dalmatian was examined because of progressive pelvic limb paraparesis. CLINICAL FINDINGS The dog had a history of chronic urinary incontinence and had been treated with phenylpropanolamine (PPA) for almost 8.5 years. Intervertebral disk disease at T12-13 was diagnosed, and a hemilaminectomy was performed. Three days after surgery, the dog developed a ventricular tachyarrhythmia. Severe left and mild right ventricular hypertrophy were detected by echocardiography. TREATMENT AND OUTCOME The arrhythmia was controlled with sotalol. Phenylpropanolamine administration was discontinued immediately before surgery and was not resumed. Heart rate and rhythm and blood pressure were within reference limits, and the ventricular hypertrophy had almost completely resolved 5 months later. Sotalol administration was discontinued. Shortly after the 5-month recheck evaluation, PPA administration was resumed, albeit at a lower dosage than that before surgery, for control of urinary incontinence. At the 10-month recheck evaluation, the dog was hypertensive and ventricular hypertrophy had recurred. Discontinuation of PPA administration was recommended but not heeded. The dog developed marked azotemia 1.5 years after surgery, which was managed by the referring veterinarian, and was subsequently lost to follow-up. CLINICAL RELEVANCE The fact that the ventricular hypertrophy almost completely resolved when PPA administration was discontinued and then recurred after it was resumed strongly suggested the drug was an important contributing factor to the cardiac disease of this patient. Patients receiving PPA on a long-term basis should be frequently monitored for cardiac disease, and use of other adrenergic receptor agonists should be avoided in such patients.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30451619/