Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Boston terrier with severe pulmonic valve narrowing and unusual heart
By Kim, J et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary cardiology : the official journal of the European Society of Veterinary Cardiology·2021·College of Veterinary Medicine and the Research Institute for Veterinary Science, South Korea·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Type B valvular and supravalvular pulmonic stenosis with aberrant pre-pulmonic right coronary artery diagnosed by non-electrocardiography-gated, multislice computed tomography in a Boston terrier.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 1.7-year-old Boston terrier was brought in because of a severe heart murmur and trouble exercising. Tests showed that he had a serious heart condition called pulmonic stenosis, which was complicated by an unusual coronary artery issue. Although the vet planned surgery to fix these problems, the dog sadly passed away during the operation due to low blood pressure. This case highlights the importance of advanced imaging techniques to identify heart issues in dogs before surgery.
People also search for: Boston terrier heart murmur · dog exercise intolerance · pulmonic stenosis treatment · congenital heart disease in dogs · dog surgery complications
Abstract
Pulmonic stenosis (PS) is a common congenital heart disease in dogs. It may be associated with an aberrant coronary artery (CA) in brachycephalic breeds. If present, a CA anomaly must be identified before pulmonic valvuloplasty. A 1.7-year-old Boston terrier was referred for a grade V/VI systolic heart murmur and exercise intolerance. Echocardiography revealed combined type B valvular and supravalvular PS; an aberrant CA was also suspected. Non-electrocardiography (ECG)-gated, 160-multislice computed tomographic angiography (CTA) confirmed severe right ventricular wall hypertrophy, a hypoplastic pulmonic valve annulus, and severe supravalvular PS with a marked main pulmonary artery bulge; a single left coronary ostium with an anomalous pre-pulmonic right CA was also identified. Surgical correction with pulmonic valvuloplasty and pulmonary artery patch angioplasty under cardiopulmonary bypass was planned. The patient died intraoperatively due to profound hypotension after weaning from extracorporeal circulation. However, this is the first case report in which type B valvular and supravalvular PS with an aberrant pre-pulmonic right CA was diagnosed by non-ECG-gated, 160-multislice CTA in a Boston terrier, showing a similar level of image quality to ECG-gated CTA. Thus, in PS cases, high-slice CTA may be helpful to determine if CA anomalies are present and to establish a therapeutic plan.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34689048/