Abbreviations: BPM, beats per minute; BW, body weight; CHF, congestive heart failure; EPIC, Evaluation of pimobendan in dogs with cardiomegaly caused by preclinical myxomatous mitral valve disease; HR, heart rate; IQR, inter quartile range; LA/Ao, left atrial-to-aortic root ratio; LVIDDN, left ventricular internal diameter in diastole-normalized; MMVD, myxomatous mitral valve disease; MR, mitral regurgitation; RR, respiratory rate (in clinic); RRR, resting respiratory rate (owner measured); RT, rectal temperature; VHS, vertebral heart sum.
AbstractBackground: The Evaluation of pimobendan in dogs with cardiomegaly caused by preclinical myxomatous mitral valve disease (EPIC) study monitored dogs with myxomatous mitral valve disease (MMVD) as they developed congestive heart failure (CHF).Objectives: To describe the changes in clinical and radiographic variables occurring as dogs with MMVD and cardiomegaly develop CHF, compared to similar dogs that do not develop CHF.Animals: One hundred and thirty-five, and 73 dogs that did or did not develop CHF, respectively.
Materials and methods:The following variables were evaluated in 2 groups of dogs (dogs that did or did not develop CHF): Heart rate (HR), clinic respiratory rate (RR), home-measured resting respiratory rate (RRR), rectal temperature (RT), body weight (BW), and vertebral heart sum (VHS). Absolute value and rate of change of each variable were calculated for each day a dog was in study. Daily means were calculated and plotted against time. The onset of CHF or last visit before leaving the study were set as reference time points.Results: The most extreme values and rate of change occurred in variables immediately before onset of CHF. Vertebral heart sum increased earliest. Heart rate, RR, and RRR also increased. Rectal temperature and BW decreased. Increases in RR and RRR were most extreme and occurred immediately before CHF.Conclusions and Clinical Importance: Dogs with MMVD and cardiomegaly experience increases in HR, RR, RRR, and VHS, and decreases in BW and RT as they develop CHF. The variables with highest absolute change and rate of change were