Matters of the Heart: Congenital Heart Disease
Humans and animals often have similar health problems. One example of this is Congenital Heart Disease. Congenital Heart Disease refers to a problem the animal is born with. There are multiple types of Congenital Heart Disease: valve malformations or dysplasia, valve narrowing or stenosis, abnormal openings between the heart chambers or septal defects, and patent ductusarteriosus.
Patent ductusarteriousus (PDA) is the most common among dogs, said Dr. Ashley Saunders, assistant professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVM).
“Most veterinarians will hear a heart murmur when the dog is taken in for a routine vaccination or first exam,” Saunders said.
After hearing the heart murmur, an x-ray is done to evaluate the heart size and possibly fluid build-up in the lungs. A cardiologist would get an ultrasound or echocardiogram of the dog’s heart to examine the blood flow through the ductusarteriosus.
“Based on the symptoms and the murmur, we will do tests to determine which congenital disease the dog has,” Saunders said. “A lot of times, we will have to do a heart ultrasound to make a definitive diagnosis.”
Generally, surgery is the treatment for dogs with PDA. The Small Animal Hospital at the CVM is known for fixing PDA with minimally invasive surgery, Saunders said. If the animal has surgery, their prognosis is great with a greater than90 percent survival percentage.
If undiagnosed and untreated, PDA can lead to heart failure. Since PDA leads to heart failure, 60 percent of dogs die when PDA is untreated. Signs of heart failure are difficulty breathing, coughing, and exercise intolerance.
About Pet Talk
Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be viewed on the Web at vetmed.tamu.edu/pet-
Suggestions for future topics may be directed to cvmtoday@cvm.tamu.edu.
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