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Title: Congenital cardiac disease in dogs. Author: McCaw D, Aronson E. Journal: Mod Vet Pract; 1984 Jun; 65(6):451-7. PubMed ID: 6738521. Abstract: Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is thought to be inherited and occurs twice as often in females as in males, most commonly in Poodles, Collies, Cocker Spaniels and Shetland Sheepdogs. About half of untreated dogs develop left-sided heart failure by 8 months of age. Clinical signs include coughing, decreased exercise tolerance, pulmonary edema, a "machinery" murmur in the pulmonic-aortic region, and a bounding pulse. An ECG may reveal an increased amplitude of the R wave and a lengthened P wave. Plain LAT films reveal loss of the cranial and caudal cardiac waists, increased sternal contact of the heart, increased width and straightened caudal border of the cardiac silhouette, elevated carina, and an enlarged left atrium. Changes on plain DV films include an elongated cardiac silhouette, enlarged right ventricle, and 3 bulges on the left side of the cardiac silhouette. Nonselective angiocardiography can be used for a definitive diagnosis and to demonstrate a reverse right-to-left PDA, in which the ascending aorta, brachiocephalic trunk and left subclavian artery are not opacified by contrast medium. Animals with a right-to-left shunt PDA are cyanotic in caudal body parts. Treatment of left-to-right shunt PDA involves ligation with 2 nonabsorbable sutures. A right-to-left shunt PDA should not be ligated but is treated by restricted exercise and periodic phlebotomy.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]