Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
German Shepherd puppy with sternal cleft and heart defects
By Benlloch-Gonzalez, Manuel & Poncet, Cyrill·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2015·From the Surgery Department, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Sternal Cleft Associated with Cantrell's Pentalogy in a German Shepherd Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 5-month-old male German Shepherd was brought to the vet because he had an abdominal wall hernia and was struggling with exercise. During the examination, the vet found a heart murmur and a skin issue over a defect in his abdominal wall. Further tests showed he had a rare condition called Cantrell's pentalogy, which included several congenital defects. The dog underwent surgery to repair the defects, and 10 months later, he was growing normally and able to exercise without problems.
People also search for: German Shepherd abdominal hernia · dog heart murmur treatment · Cantrell's pentalogy in dogs
Abstract
A 5 mo old male German shepherd dog weighing 15.5 kg was presented with an abdominal wall hernia and exercise intolerance. Physical examination showed a grade II/VI systolic heart murmur and an area of cutaneous atrophy overlying a midline supraumbilical wall defect. Thoracic radiography, computed tomography, and ultrasound examination revealed a congenital caudal sternal cleft, a supraumbilical diastasis rectus, and a patent ductus arteriosus. Exploratory surgery confirmed defects of the pars sternalis of the diaphragm and caudoventral pericardium and a persistent left cranial vena cava. Those findings were compatible with Cantrell's pentalogy. Surgical treatment included ligation of the patent ductus arteriosus through the sternal cleft, diaphragmatic reconstruction with paracostal extension of the diaphragmatic defect, pericardial and linea alba appositional reconstruction, and primary approximation of the sternal halves. Growth and exercise activity were normal 10 mo after surgery. The discovery of a midline cranial abdominal wall, pericardial, diaphragmatic, or sternal defect should prompt a thorough examination to rule out any possible associated syndrome. Cantrell's pentalogy presents various degrees of expression and is rare in dogs. Management involves early surgical repair of congenital anomalies to protect the visceral structures. The prognosis in dogs with mild forms of the syndrome is encouraging.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26083439/