Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Observed and expected reliability of echocardiographic volumetric methods and critical change values for quantification of mitral regurgitant fraction in dogs.
- Journal:
- Journal of veterinary internal medicine
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Loughran, Kerry A et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Clinical Sciences and Advanced Medicine · United States
- Species:
- dog
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reliability of echocardiographic calculations for stroke volume and mitral regurgitant fraction (RF) are affected by observer variability and lack of a gold standard. Variability is used to calculate critical change values (CCVs) that are thresholds representing real change in a measure not associated with observer variability. HYPOTHESIS: Observed intra- and interobserver accuracy and variability in healthy dogs help model CCV for RF. ANIMALS: Reliability cohort of 34 healthy dogs; allometric scaling cohort of 99 dogs with heart disease and 25 healthy dogs. METHODS: Accuracy, variability, and CCV of 2 observers using geometric and flow-based echocardiography were prospectively compared against a standard of RF = 0% and extrapolated across a range of expected RFvalues in the reliability cohort partly derived from cardiac dimensions predicted by the allometric cohort. RESULTS: Accuracy of methods to determine RFin descending order was 4-chamber bullet (Bullet), mitral inflow, cube formula, and Simpson's method of disks. Intraobserver variability was relatively high. The CCV for RFranged from 28% to 88% and was inversely related to RFwhen extrapolated for use in affected dogs. For both observers, the Bulletmethod had the lowest intraobserver CCV (Operator 1:28%, Operator 2:41%). Interobserver strength of agreement was low with intraclass correlation coefficients ranging from 0.210 to 0.413. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: Echocardiographic volumetric methods used to calculate stroke volume and RFhave low accuracy and high variability in healthy dogs. Extrapolation of observed CCV to a range of expected RFsuggests observers and methods are not interchangeable and variability might hinder routine clinical usage. Individual observers should be aware of their own variability and CCV.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39328176/