Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cardiac auscultation is an important screening test at the first health examination of puppies because most clinically relevant congenital cardiac anomalies cause a loud murmur from birth. This retrospective study aimed to investigate the age at which dogs with suspected congenital cardiac anomalies were referred to a veterinary cardiology specialist for murmur investigation. A secondary aim was to establish the time interval between the visit to the cardiologist and the first available murmur documentation. The digital archive of a veterinary teaching hospital was searched for dogs with congenital cardiac anomalies and puppies with innocent murmurs during a 5-year period. Dogs had to be referred because of a murmur, and they had to undergo physical examination and echocardiography by a veterinary cardiology specialist. The health certificate section of the pet passport, and the medical records from the referring veterinarian, were reviewed to identify the date when the murmur was first documented.
Results
Of the 271 included dogs, 94% had a congenital cardiac anomaly and 6% had an innocent murmur. The dogs’ median age was 190 days when they were examined by the cardiologist. Only 10% of the dogs were referred by the breeder’s veterinarian, while 90% of the dogs were referred by the new owner’s veterinarian. The median age of the first available murmur documentation by a first opinion veterinary practitioner was 95 days.
Conclusions
Only 10% of the puppies in the present study were referred to a veterinary cardiology specialist for murmur investigation before they were sold to a new owner. Referral prior to re-homing would have been feasible if the murmur had been detected and documented by the breeder’s veterinarian, if referral was offered by the breeder’s veterinarian and the referral was accepted by the breeder.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Veterinary,General Medicine
Reference42 articles.
1. Côté E, Edwards NJ, Ettinger SJ, Fuentes VL, MacDonald KA, Scansen BA, et al. Management of incidentally detected heart murmurs in dogs and cats. J Vet Cardiol. 2015;17:245–61.
2. Eyster GE, Eyster JT, Cords GB, Johnston J. Patent ductus arteriosus in the dog: characteristics of occurrence and results of surgery in one hundred consecutive cases. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1976;168:435–8.
3. Passantino A, Pugliese M, Quartarone V, Russo N, Bussadori R, Guercio B. Medico-legal aspects of congenital heart diseases in buying and selling of pets. Vet World. 2017;10:130–5.
4. Bomassi E, Misbach C, Tissier R, Gouni V, Trehiou-Sechi E, Petit AM, et al. Signalment, clinical features, echocardiographic findings, and outcome of dogs and cats with ventricular septal defects: 109 cases (1992–2013). J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2015;247:166–75.
5. Chetboul V, Poissonnier C, Bomassi E, Jamin C, Pouchelon J, Tissier R, et al. Epidemiological, clinical, and echocardiographic features, and outcome of dogs with Ebstein’s anomaly: 32 cases (2002–2016). J Vet Cardiol. 2020;29:11–21.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献