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Research Communications of the 26 th ECVIM‐CA Congress
Author(s) -
R Selder,
Karin Weber,
Martin S. Bergmann,
K. Geisweid,
Kathrin Hartmann,
Kingdom Mcluckiea,
Sarah Spencer,
Séverine Tasker,
Navneet K. Dhand,
Julia A. Beatty,
Andreas Hiebl,
M. Stejskal,
Igor Loncaric,
Joachim Spergser,
T R€,
Anja Joachim,
Aaron Jason Bilek,
Reinhard Hirt,
Tospires Delaude,
S Rodriguez Campos,
Anou Dreyfus,
Thierry Francey,
Ariane Schweighauser,
S. Schuller,
Camille E G Glaus,
M Wenger,
Nadja Sigrist,
Katrin Beckmann,
C Kuemmerle,
Nathalie HoferInteeworn,
Claudia Mueller,
Javier Matos
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of veterinary internal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.356
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1939-1676
pISSN - 0891-6640
DOI - 10.1111/jvim.14600
Subject(s) - medicine , family medicine , library science , computer science
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) can lead to right ventricular remodeling and failure. Right ventricular dysfunction and tricuspid\udregurgitation can lead to right atrial enlargement. In dogs, echocardiographic evaluation of right atrial enlargement is thusfar only based on subjective assessment. The aim was to evaluate reliability of the right atrial area index (RAAI) to characterize\udright atrial size and PH severity in dogs. The study was prospective, multicenter and observational. We included 103 client owned dogs: 45 dogs with PH and 58 healthy dogs as control group. PH was classified according to tricuspid\udregurgitation pressure gradient (TRPG) in mild (TRPG: 36-50 mmHg; n = 15 dogs), moderate (TRPG: 51-75 mmHg; n = 9\uddogs) and severe (TRPG >75 mmHg; n = 21 dogs). Nine dogs with PH had right-sided congestive heart failure (CHF). Echocardiographic view of the right atrium was obtained from the left apical 4-chamber view optimized for the right heart and the right atrial area was measured by planimetry at the end of ventricular systole. RAAI was calculated as right atrial area divided by body surface area.\udRight atrial area showed a strong positive linear correlation with body surface area in healthy dogs (r = 0.89; P < 0.0001).\udRAAI was significantly higher (P < 0.05) in dogs with moderate PH (11.9 +/- 7.3 cm2/m2) and severe PH (12.0 +/- 4.5 cm2/m2) than in those with mild PH (6.9 1.5 cm2/m2) or control group (7.1 +/- 1.6 cm2/m2). No difference in RAAI was found between\uddogs of the two latter groups, or between dogs with moderate and severe PH. A weak positive correlation was found between RAAI and TRPG (r = 0.37; P < 0.05) and the TRPG was not different between dogs with right-sided CHF (81 29 mmHg) or without right-sided CHF (76 +/- 31 mmHg). Conversely, RAAI was significantly higher (P < 0.0001) in dogs with right-sided CHF\ud(17.0 +/- 4.5 cm2/m2) in comparison to those without right-sided CHF (8.6 +/- 3.6 cm2/m2). The most accurate cut-off value in the prediction of right-sided CHF was >12.3 cm2/m2 (sensitivity: 89%; specificity: 89%). Intra- and inter-observer measurement variability was clinically acceptable (average coefficient of variation <10%).\udThe study showed that RAAI increases in dogs with moderate to-severe PH and is particularly high in dogs with right-sided\udCHF. RAAI is expected to provide beneficial information during the assessment of PH severity in dogs and, possibly, when PH\udleads to remarkable hemodynamic consequences but the tricuspid regurgitation is absent or difficult to measure. Studies are needed to verify if RAAI is a prognostic factor in dogs with PH