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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How to tell normal vs aortic stenosis heart murmurs in Boxers

By Höglund, Katja et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2007·Department of Anatomy and Physiology·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Time-frequency and complexity analyses for differentiation of physiologic murmurs from heart murmurs caused by aortic stenosis in Boxers.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 27 Boxers with heart murmurs were examined to see if certain sound analyses could tell the difference between normal heart murmurs and those caused by a condition called aortic stenosis (AS). The researchers found that measuring how long the murmur lasted at a specific frequency was helpful in distinguishing between the two types of murmurs. They discovered that combining this measurement with another analysis method could accurately identify dogs with mild AS. This could help veterinarians better assess heart health in Boxers.

People also search for: Boxer heart murmur causes · aortic stenosis in dogs · how to tell if my dog has a heart problem

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether time-frequency and complexity analyses of heart murmurs can be used to differentiate physiologic murmurs from murmurs caused by aortic stenosis (AS) in Boxers. ANIMALS: 27 Boxers with murmurs. PROCEDURES: Dogs were evaluated via auscultation and echocardiography. Analyses of time-frequency properties (TFPs; ie, maximal murmur frequency and duration of murmur frequency > 200 Hz) and correlation dimension (T(2)) of murmurs were performed on phonocardiographic sound data. Time-frequency property and T(2) analyses of low-intensity murmurs in 16 dogs without AS were performed at 7 weeks and 12 months of age. Additionally, TFP and T(2) analyses were performed on data obtained from 11 adult AS-affected dogs with murmurs. RESULTS: In dogs with low-intensity murmurs, TFP or T(2) values at 7 weeks and 12 months did not differ significantly. For differentiation of physiologic murmurs from murmurs caused by mild AS, duration of murmur frequency > 200 Hz was useful and the combination assessment of duration of frequency > 200 Hz and T(2) of the murmur had a sensitivity of 94% and a specificity of 82%. Maximal murmur frequency did not differentiate dogs with AS from those without AS. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggested that assessment of the duration of murmur frequency > 200 Hz can be used to distinguish physiologic heart murmurs from murmurs caused by mild AS in Boxers. Combination of this analysis with T(2) analysis may be a useful complementary method for diagnostic assessment of cardiovascular function in dogs.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17764410/