Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Sudden death linked to heart gene mutation in English Springer
By Ware, W A et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary internal medicine·2015·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Sudden death associated with QT interval prolongation and KCNQ1 gene mutation in a family of English Springer Spaniels.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 5-year-old English Springer Spaniel died suddenly just months after having a litter of puppies, and shortly after, three of her puppies also passed away unexpectedly. Veterinarians found that three of the surviving puppies had a heart condition called prolonged QT interval, which can lead to dangerous heart rhythms. Genetic testing revealed a mutation in the KCNQ1 gene, which is linked to this heart issue. Unfortunately, this family of dogs is the first documented case of inherited long QT syndrome in dogs, highlighting a serious risk for sudden death due to heart problems.
People also search for: English Springer Spaniel sudden death · dog heart problems QT interval · KCNQ1 gene mutation in dogs
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A 5-year-old, healthy English Springer Spaniel died suddenly 4 months after delivering a litter of 7 puppies. Within 4 months of the dam's death, 3 offspring also died suddenly. HYPOTHESIS: Abnormal cardiac repolarization, caused by an inherited long QT syndrome, is thought to be responsible for arrhythmias leading to sudden death in this family. ANIMALS: Four remaining dogs from the affected litter and 11 related dogs. METHODS: Physical examination and resting ECG were done on the littermates and 9 related dogs. Additional tests on some or all littermates included echocardiogram with Doppler, Holter monitoring, and routine serum biochemistry. Blood for DNA sequencing was obtained from all 15 dogs. RESULTS: Three of 4 littermates examined, but no other dogs, had prolonged QT intervals with unique T-wave morphology. DNA sequencing of the KCNQ1 gene identified a heterozygous single base pair mutation, unique to these 3 dogs, which changes a conserved amino acid from threonine to lysine and is predicted to change protein structure. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL IMPORTANCE: This family represents the first documentation in dogs of spontaneous familial QT prolongation, which was associated with a KCNQ1 gene mutation and sudden death. Although the final rhythm could not be documented in these dogs, their phenotypic manifestations of QT interval prolongation and abnormal ECG restitution suggested increased risk for sudden arrhythmic death. The KCNQ1 gene mutation identified is speculated to impair the cardiac repolarizing current IKs, similar to KCNQ1 mutations causing long QT syndrome 1 in humans.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25779927/