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Vet Guide to Ebstein’s Anomaly in Dogs 2025 🐶❤️

  • 82 days ago
  • 5 min read
Vet Guide to Ebstein’s Anomaly in Dogs 2025 🐶❤️

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Vet Guide to Ebstein’s Anomaly in Dogs 2025 🐶❤️

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

Ebstein’s Anomaly is a rare congenital defect of the tricuspid valve where the septal and posterior leaflets are displaced toward the apex of the right ventricle, causing part of the ventricle to become “atrialized.” This leads to significant enlargement of the right atrium, tricuspid regurgitation, and sometimes atrial wall dysfunction. 💔

📍 Causes & Anatomy

  • Congenital malformation—leaflets tethered and displaced, reducing the effective RV chamber.
  • Often part of the tricuspid valve dysplasia continuum, seen in breeds like Labrador Retrievers, Beagles, and French Bulldogs.
  • It may be inherited, with animal chromosome 9-linked mutations noted in some families.

⚠️ Clinical Signs

  • Variable signs depending on severity—from asymptomatic to exercise intolerance, dyspnea, right-sided congestive signs (ascites, pleural effusion).
  • May hear systolic murmur (tricuspid regurgitation), arrhythmias—sometimes associated with WPW-like pathways.
  • Enlarged right atrium can lead to atrial arrhythmias.

🔬 Diagnostic Approach

  • Cardiac auscultation: murmur and right-sided echo sounds.
  • Thoracic radiographs: marked right atrial enlargement, right ventricular volume overload.
  • Echocardiography (gold standard): shows apical displacement of tricuspid leaflets, enlargement of RA and atrialized RV, tricuspid regurgitation via color Doppler.
  • ECG: may reveal right atrial enlargement, bundle branch conduction defects or accessory pathways.

💊 Management Options

  • Medical therapy: For signs of right-sided failure—diuretics, ACE inhibitors, positive inotropes, antiarrhythmics.
  • Activity modification: Avoid stress/exertion; monitor closely for arrhythmias.
  • Interventional surgery: Valve repair or replacement is complex and experimental in dogs; only possible at specialty centers.

📈 Prognosis & Monitoring

  • Asymptomatic dogs may remain stable for years with routine care.
  • Symptomatic or severe cases risk right heart failure or arrhythmic complications.
  • Long-term monitoring via echo, ECG, and thoracic imaging—adjust meds and support as needed.

🧬 Genetic & Breeding Considerations

  • Likely familial inheritance; screening is critical for breeding dogs.
  • Use echocardiography and, where available, genetic testing to identify affected/carrier individuals.
  • Avoid breeding dogs with valve displacement or tricuspid dysplasia to reduce congenital disease incidence.

📊 Summary Table

Severity Signs Management
Mild None or mild murmur Monitor only
Moderate Exercise intolerance, mild effusion Diuretics, ACE‑I, arrhythmia control
Severe Ascites, cyanosis, arrhythmias Aggressive medical therapy, specialist referral

✅ Vet Tips by Dr Duncan Houston BVSc

  • 🎯 Evaluate persistent murmurs—especially with right‑sided signs—with an echo.
  • 📆 Schedule regular cardiac rechecks every 6–12 months.
  • 🏡 Keep affected dogs calm—minimize stress, watch for arrhythmias.
  • ⚠️ Discuss breeding options—screen dogs to reduce disease incidence.
  • 📲 In emergencies (ascites or dyspnea), consult via AskAVet.com.
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