| Literature DB >> 35737345 |
Sol-Ji Choi1, Won-Kyoung Yoon2, Hyerin Ahn1, Woo-Jin Song1,3, Ul-Soo Choi4.
Abstract
Myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) is the most common heart disease in small breed dogs. Dogs with MMVD commonly show clinical signs of dyspnea due to cardiogenic pulmonary edema (CPE). Reticulocytosis in the absence of anemia (RAA) is a hematological finding in hypoxic conditions. We aimed to assess the prevalence of RAA in dogs with CPE due to MMVD, and evaluate whether RAA is reversible with amelioration of dyspnea. Twenty-nine client-owned dogs with CPE due to MMVD were included. Dogs who died within 6 weeks of the onset of CPE were included in the non-survival group, while the others comprised the survival group. Of the 21 dogs, RAA was observed in 17 dogs (80.9%). In the RAA group, the absolute reticulocyte count significantly decreased as CPE resolved (p < 0.001). The mean absolute reticulocyte count in the RAA group was 163.90 ± 50.77 on the first measurement and 78.84 ± 25.64 after resolution of CPE. In the RAA group, no significant differences in mean absolute reticulocyte count were observed between the survival and non-survival groups at either the first or second measurement. Our results indicate that RAA occurs in dogs with MMVD-related CPE and can resolve after resolution of CPE.Entities:
Keywords: cardiogenic pulmonary edema; dog; hematology; myxomatous mitral valve disease; reticulocytosis in absence of anemia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35737345 PMCID: PMC9228217 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci9060293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Signalment of MMVD dogs with CPE (n = 29).
| Characteristic | Value |
|---|---|
| Age (Mean ± SD years, range) | 12 ± 2.42, 8–16 |
| Reoccurrence ( | 2, 9.54 |
| Sex | |
| Female ( | 3, 14.2 |
| Spayed female ( | 8, 38.0 |
| Male ( | 2, 9.5 |
| Castrated male ( | 8, 38.0 |
| Breed | |
| Maltese ( | 17, 80.9 |
| Shih Tzu ( | 3, 17.6 |
| Pomeranian ( | 1, 4.7 |
CPE: cardiogenic pulmonary edema; MMVD: myxomatous mitral valve disease.
Figure 1Proportion of reticulocytosis in the absence of anemia (RAA).
Figure 2Changes in absolute reticulocyte count in (A) the RAA group and (B) the non-RAA group. RAA: reticulocytosis in absence of anemia.
Figure 3Representative case of this study. (A) Right lateral view of a radiography taken in an emergency visit due to cardiogenic pulmonary edema (CPE) with myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD). (B) Right lateral view of a radiography of the same case after resolution of CPE due to MMVD. (C) The absolute reticulocyte was decreased from 261.8 K/μL to 96.7 K/μL.
Figure 4Absolute reticulocyte count in the survived and non-survived dogs in the RAA group. At both (A) the first and (B) the second measurements, there were no significant differences in absolute reticulocyte count between survived and non-survived groups. RAA: reticulocytosis in the absence of anemia.