RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW: CONGENITAL PULMONARY ARTERY STENOSIS IN DOGS (PREVALENCE FORMS)
Abstract and keywords
Abstract (English):
Objective: to determine the occurrence and clinical characteristics of different types of PS (pulmonary stenosis) in dogs Reseach tasks: to identify the breed predisposition to PS, to study the clinical, echocardiographic and electrocardiographic characteristics of various types of PS and to analyse their dependence on the severity of the heart defect. Materials and methods: a retrospective analysis of Biocontrol veterinary clinic medical records throughout six years (2014–2020). Cardiological examination of dogs presented to the primary ambulatory appointment included physical examination, echocardiography using the Philips HD15 ultrasound system, radiography and electrocardiography. Animals: 31 dogs with isolated pulmonary artery stenosis (17 males and 14 females). Breeds: French Bulldog, English Bulldog, Yorkshire Terrier, German Spitz, American Pit Bull Terrier, Staffordshire Terrier, Toy Terrier, Cane Corso, Whippet, Biewer Yorkshire Terrier, Chihuahua, Entlebucher, German Boxer, East European Shepherd, American Bully. Results and discussion: 43 dogs with a PS were examined from 1 January 2014 to 31 December 2020. Of these, 31 dogs (72 %) with isolated PS and 12 dogs (28 %) with a combination of PS with other congenital heart defects. The most common combinations were PS with aortic stenosis (25 %) and PS with ventricular septal defect (25 %). The most common form of isolated PS was type A valve stenosis (68 %). Severe stenosis prevailed (58 %). The most common breeds were French Bulldogs (22.6 %), English Bulldogs (16.1 %) and Yorkshire Terriers (9.7 %). Males were more prevalent (55 %). 61 % of animals from the group of dogs with severe PS visited clinic because of signalment, and syncope was the most frequently reported symptom (28 %). The symptoms associated with congenital heart defect were not identified in the group of animals with moderate and mild degrees of PS. ECG showed that 100 % of dogs were diagnosed with sinus rhythm. Electrical right axis deviation of the heart was detected in 45 % of dogs. Direct dependency was between the severity of the stenosis and the severity of electrical right axis deviation. According to echocardiographic studies — 100 % of animals with severe and moderate stenosis and 14% with mild stenosis were diagnosed with concentric, eccentric or mixed forms of right ventricle myocardial hypertrophy, enlargement of the right atrial. Direct dependency is founded between the severity of stenosis, the type of right ventricle hypertrophy and the size of the right atrium. The more severe stenosis, the more mixed form of hypertrophy; increase of the right atrium was recorded in dogs with mixed right ventricular hypertrophy. Post-stenotic dilatation of the trunk and branches of the pulmonary artery was determined in all dogs with single right coronary artery type R2A. Conclusions: PS is most commonly found in French Bulldogs. The most common type of PS is type A valvular stenosis in the form of an isolated defect. Severe PS is prevalent. There is direct dependency is between the severity of the defect and the severity of right ventricular myocardial hypertrophy, the large size of the right atrium and electrical right axis deviation of the heart.

Keywords:
congenital heart defects, pulmonic stenosis, dogs, echocardiography, electrocardiography, breed predisposition
Text
Publication text (PDF): Read Download
References

1. Chetboul V., Damoiseaux C., Poissonnier C., Lavennes M., Bertrand S., Borenstein N., Behr L., Pouchelon J. L., Gouni V., Desquilbet L., Specific features and survival of French bulldogs with congenital pulmonic stenosis: a prospective cohort study of 66 cases, Journal of Veterinary Cardiology, 2018, No. 20, pp. 405-414. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2018.09.001.

2. Brambilla P.G., Polli M., Pradelli D., Papa M., Rizzi R., Bagardi M., Bussadori C., Epidemiological study of congenital heart diseases in dogs: prevalence, popularity, and volatility throughout twenty years of clinical practice, PLoS ONE, 2020, No. 15, e0230160. doi:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230160.

3. Tidholm A., Retrospective study of congenital heart defects in 151 dogs, J Small Anim Pract, 1997, No. 38, pp. 94-98. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-5827.1997.tb03326.x.

4. Oliveira P., Domenech O., Silva J., Vannini S., Bussadori R., Bussadori C., Retrospective Review of Congenital Heart Disease in 976 Dogs, J Vet Intern Med, 2011, No. 25, pp. 477-483. doihttps://doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-1676.2011.0711.x.

5. Bussadori C., DeMadron E., Santilli R.A., Borgarelli M., Balloon valvuloplasty in 30 dogs with pulmonic stenosis: effect of valve morphology and annular size on initial and 1-year outcome, J Vet Intern Med, 2001, No. 15(6), pp. 553-558. doi:https://doi.org/10.1892/0891-6640(2001)015<0553:bvidwp>2.3.co;2.

6. Locatelli C., Spalla I., Domenech O., Sala E., Brambilla P.G., Bussadori C., Pulmonic stenosis in dogs: survival and risk factors in a retrospective cohort of patients, J Small Anim Pract, 2013, No. 54(9), pp. 445-452. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/jsap.12113.

7. Kander M., Pasławska U., Staszczyk M., Cepiel A., Pasławski R., Mazur G., Noszczyk-Nowak A., Retrospective analysis of co-occurrence of congenital aortic stenosis and pulmonary artery stenosis in dogs, Pol J Vet Sci, 2015, No. 18(4), pp. 841-845. doi:https://doi.org/10.1515/pjvs-2015-0109.

8. Nishimura S., Visser L.C., Belanger C., Oldach M., Gunther-Harrington C.T., Stern J.A., Echocardiographic evaluation of velocity ratio, velocity time integral ratio, and pulmonary valve area in dogs with pulmonary valve stenosis, J Vet Intern Med, 2018, No. 32(5), pp. 1570-1578. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15244.

9. Bussadori C., Amberger C., Le Bobinnec G., Lombard C.W., Guidelines for the echocardiographic studies of suspected subaortic and pulmonic stenosis, J Vet Cardiol, 2000, No. 2(2), pp. 15-22. doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/s1760-2734(06)70007-8.

10. Locatelli C., Domenech O., Silva J., Oliveira P., Sala E., Brambilla P.G., Bussadori C., Independent predictors of immediate and long-term results after pulmonary balloon valvuloplasty in dogs, J Vet Cardiol, 2011, No. 13(1), pp. 21-30. doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2010.10.003.

11. Goya S., Wada T., Shimada K., Uemura A., Tanaka R., Combined cutting balloon and conventional balloon angioplasty in a dog with supravalvular pulmonary stenosis, J Vet Med Sci, 2018, No. 80(11), pp. 1754-1757. doi:https://doi.org/10.1292/jvms.18-0060.

12. Johnson Stafford M., Martin M., Results of balloon valvuloplasty in 40 dogs with pulmonic stenosis, J Small Anim Pract, 2004, No. 45(3), pp. 148-153. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-5827.2004.tb00217.x.

13. Scansen B., Coronary Artery Anomalies in Animals, Veterinary Sciences, 2017, No. 4(4), pp. 20-38. doihttps://doi.org/10.3390/vetsci4020020

14. Navalon I., Pradelli D., Bussadori C.M., Transesophageal echocardiography to diagnose anomalous right coronary artery type R2A in dogs, Journal of Veterinary Cardiology, 2015, No. 17(4), pp. 262-270. doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2015.08.007.

15. Schrope, D.P., Prevalence of congenital heart disease in 76,301 mixed-breed dogs and 57,025 mixed-breed cats, J Vet Cardiol, 2015, No. 17(3), pp. 192-202. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2015.06.001.

16. Treseder J.R., Jung SeungWoo, Balloon dilation of congenital supravalvular pulmonic stenosis in a dog, J Vet Sci, 2017, No. 18(1), pp. 111-114. doi:https://doi.org/10.4142/jvs.2017.18.1.111.

17. Kvart K., Xeggstrem J., Auskul`taciya serdcza i fonokardiografiya u sobak, koshek i loshadej [Auscultation of the heart and phonocardiography in dogs, cats and horses], Moscow, 2016, 128 p. (In russ.)

18. Milo S., Fiegel A., Shem-Tov A., Neufeld H.N., and Goor D.A., Hour-glass deformity of the pulmonary valve: a third type of pulmonary valve stenosis, J Br Heart, 1988 Aug, No. 60(2), pp. 128-133. doi:https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.60.2.128

19. Fukushima Ryuji, Tanaka Ryou, Suzuki Shuji, Hamabe Rina, Machida Noboru, Nakao Shu, Saida Yuto, Takashima Kazuaki, Matsumoto Hirotaka, Koyama Hidekazu, Hirose Hisashi, Yamane Yoshihisa, Epidemiological and morphological studies of double-chambered right ventricle in dogs, J Vet Med Sci, 2011, No. 73(10), pp. 1287-1293. doi:https://doi.org/10.1292/jvms.10-0485.

20. Martin J.M., Orton E.C, Boon J.A., Mama Khursheed R., Gaynor J.S., Bright J.M., Surgical correction of double-chambered right ventricle in dogs, J Am Vet Med Assoc, 2002, Vol. 15, No. 220(6), pp. 770-774, 768. doi:https://doi.org/10.2460/javma.2002.220.770.

21. Francis A.J., Johnson M.J.S., Culshaw G.C., Corcoran B.M., Martin M.W.S., French A.T., Outcome in 55 dogs with pulmonic stenosis that did not undergo balloon valvuloplasty or surgery, J Small Anim Pract, 2011, No. 52(6), pp. 282-288. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-5827.2011.01059.x.

22. Fuentes L.V., Dennis S., Johnson L.R., Bsava Manual of Canine and Feline, Cardiorespiratory Medicine, 2nd Ed., 2010, 368 p.

23. Kraus M.S., Moïse N.S., Rishniw M., Dykes N., Erb H., Morphology of ventricular arrhythmias in the Boxer as measured by 12-lead electrocardiography with pace-mapping comparison, J Vet Intern Med, 2002, No.16, pp. 153-158.

Login or Create
* Forgot password?