|
Subaortic
Stenosis
by
Anita R. Weidinger, D.V.M.
Subaortic
stenosis (SAS) is a genetic and congenital heart condition of
dogs, meaning that it is present at birth and it can be inherited.
Several breeds can be affected including the Golden Retriever.
The condition is usually detected during puppy vaccine visits
to the veterinarian by hearing a heart murmur during physical
examination. A heart murmur is the abnormal sound of blood rushing
through one of the heart valves. Instead of just the heart beat,
a whistle of blood flow through a narrowed opening is heard.
The puppy will most likely appear normal in all other respects.
There is a possibility that the murmur may come and go, or it
may develop slowly; therefore, it is important to check a puppy's
heart condition often during the first few months of age. This
is a very frustrating condition to be identified in your pet
because the future is bleak and the chance for long term survival
is low. These dogs will either go into heart failure or they
will die suddenly, essentially from a severe heart attack.
A little
review of normal heart function and circulation is in order to
understand what SAS is and why it is so devastating. As you may
remember from high school science, the heart has four chambers;
the right atrium, the right ventricle, the left atrium, and the
left ventricle. You can picture these as four circles together
with two on the top and two on the bottom. The atria make up
the top of the heart and receive blood from veins and the ventricles
make up the bottom of the heart and pump blood into the arteries.
Blood from most of the body is returned to the right atrium by
veins, it passes down into the right ventricle, and is then pumped
to the lungs where it receives oxygen. The veins of the lungs
return blood to the left atrium and it passes into the left ventricle.
There are valves or gates at each of these junctions throughout
the heart and the aortic valve is between the left ventricle
and the aorta, which is the main artery exiting the heart carrying
oxygenated blood to the body. Subaortic stenosis is a narrowing
of the left ventricular chamber just below the aortic valve.
This creates problems for the heart because instead of just having
a gate to open and close when blood is pumped out, there is a
narrow canal almost like a funnel below the valve that makes
the heart work harder to push the blood out of the left ventricle
and into the aorta. When the heart has to work harder, the heart
muscle responds by thickening. As the muscle wall thickens the
chamber size can shrink in comparison decreasing the amount of
blood that the left ventricle can handle. The thickened heart
muscle also demands more oxygen to work. The blood vessels that
supply the heart muscle with oxygen, the coronary arteries, are
squeezed out by the thickness of the muscle and can't carry enough
blood to the heart muscle. This can lead to muscle tissue of
the heart dying as in a heart attack. The area of the left ventricle
that is narrowed below the aortic valve also can develop scar
tissue due to the force of blood through this area. The scar
tissue narrows the canal more and decreases the flexibility of
this area.
As mentioned
before, the two potential outcomes of SAS are heart failure and
sudden death. Changes take place in the heart because of the
narrowed aortic canal. The heart works harder, the wall of the
heart muscle thickens, the chamber size decreases, and the amount
of blood the ventricle can handle decreases. Heart failure often
occurs when the heart can not get enough blood in and out to
keep up with demand. Blood backs up behind the left side of the
heart in the lungs and causes congestion. The dog shows this
congestion by coughing, weakness, tiring easily, and possibly
fainting. Sudden death is just what it sounds like, the dog will
die without giving us any clue that something is wrong. What
probably happens to cause this sudden death is that a blood clot
severely disrupts circulation to the heart muscle and it dies
or the heart rhythm is changed dramatically and suddenly so the
heart doesn't function and just stops.
What can
you do if your puppy is diagnosed with a heart murmur consistent
with SAS? First of all, contact your breeder if you can to let
them know. They will not want to use this same set of parents
to breed again. The puppies and dogs affected with SAS can be
evaluated and classified as mild, moderate, or severe. Tests
such as chest X-rays, echocardiography, and electro-cardiography
can be performed to evaluate the severity of the situation. Unfortunately,
not much can be done to treat the condition. A balloon catheter
can be used in an attempt to dilate the narrowed aortic canal
but the canal soon narrows again. If your dog with SAS develops
heart failure, medications can be prescribed to alleviate the
clinical signs it is experiencing. You can not prepare yourself
for the sudden death of your pet. Even if you know that it is
a possibility with SAS, it is still a shock when it occurs.
|