Med. Weter. 70 (9), 550-552, 2014
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| Pasławska U., Cepiel A., Noszczyk-Nowak A., Staszczyk M., Janiszewski A.
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| Epidemiological prevalence of aortic stenosis in dogs in Poland
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| The aim of the study was to determine the epidemiological prevalence of aortic stenosis (AS) among dogs
in Poland.
Among 287 dogs, diagnosed with congenital heart disease at the Department of Internal Diseases and the
Clinic of Horses, Dogs and Cats, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, at the Wroclaw University of Environmental
and Life Sciences in Poland, in the years 2004-2011, there were 97 dogs with diagnosed AS. Diagnosis was based
on clinical signs and physical examination, including auscultation and echocardiography (two-dimensional
and Doppler). AS constituted 33.8% of all diagnosed congenital heart defects. In our clinic, aortic stenosis and
pulmonic stenosis share the 1st place among the most commonly presented congenital malformations. Out of
all AS cases diagnosed in the clinic, 65.6% were mild, 20.3% severe, and 14.1% moderate. The predominant
form of AS was subaortic stenosis, with 90.7% affected dogs. Other types were less common: valvular aortic
stenosis and supravalvular aortic stenosis accounted for 8.3% and 1% of all AS cases, respectively. Females
seem to be less predisposed than males. Among various breeds, the sex predisposition seems to be significant
in the Golden Retriever breed, in which 3 times more males than females are affected.
The epidemiological prevalence of aortic stenosis among dogs in Poland is similar to that described in other
European countries and America. Clinical signs usually do not appear in mild and moderate cases, so these dogs
can live normally and reproduce for many years. In order to decrease the incidence of AS, it is important to do
screening tests of predisposed breeds and exclude animals with all classes of this malformation from breeding. |
| Key words: aortic stenosis, congenital heart malformations, dogs |