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🩺 Vet’s 2025 Guide to Canine Pulmonary Hypertension 🚀

  • 110 days ago
  • 6 min read
🩺 Vet’s 2025 Guide to Canine Pulmonary Hypertension 🚀

    In this article

Vet’s 2025 Guide to Canine Pulmonary Hypertension 💓 Echo Diagnosis, Treatment & Home Support

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

💡 What Is Pulmonary Hypertension?

Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is abnormally high blood pressure in the lung arteries (systolic >30 mm Hg), often due to heart or lung disease, causing strain on the right side of the heart.

1. Causes & Risk Factors

  • Left-sided heart disease: e.g. mitral valve disease leading to back-pressure.
  • Chronic lung disease, such as fibrosis, pneumonia, bronchitis, or brachycephalic syndrome.
  • Heartworm disease, embolism, congenital shunts or thrombi.
  • Breed & age predisposition: small breeds, older dogs (median 12 years), basset hounds, Westies with pulmonary fibrosis.

2. Clinical Signs ⚠️

  • Exercise intolerance, increased respiratory rate, cough, difficulty breathing.
  • Syncope (fainting) in ~64% of cases.
  • Cyanosis—bluish gums, weak pulses, fluid in abdomen (ascites).
  • Heart murmur, split S2, jugular distension in advanced cases.

3. Staging & Classification

Dogs are classed I–IV by severity:

  • Class I–II: mild/no symptoms at rest, exercise intolerance only.
  • Class III–IV: difficulty at rest, fainting, fluid buildup—prompt treatment required.

4. Diagnostic Work‑Up 🧪

  • Physical exam: detect cyanosis, murmurs, and ascites.
  • Thoracic X‑rays: enlarged right heart, dilated pulmonary arteries.
  • Echocardiogram: gold standard—uses Doppler to estimate pulmonary artery pressures.
  • Blood tests: CBC, chemistry, heartworm test, urinalysis, biomarkers (NT‑proBNP, troponins).
  • Right heart catheterization: direct pressure measurement—used less often in clinical settings.

5. Treatment & Management ❤️

5.1 Primary Goals

Treat underlying cause—e.g., heart disease, lung disease, heartworm—while supporting heart and lungs directly.

5.2 Vasodilators

  • Sildenafil: main therapy—reduces pulmonary artery pressure, improves survival (median ~3 months in severe cases, but years possible).
  • Tadalafil: similar effect; used cautiously due to blood pressure effects.

5.3 Cardiac Support

  • Pimobendan: helps broken-heart cases, improves heart function and reduces PAP.

5.4 Additional Supportive Meds

  • Diuretics (furosemide, spironolactone) for ascites in CHF cases.
  • Theophylline or bronchodilators for airway disease, and anti-inflammatories if required.

5.5 Oxygen & Hospitalization

Hospital care with oxygen support in moderate-to-severe cases, plus treat complications such as fluid overload.

6. Prognosis 🧭

  • Improved outcomes with treatment: 84% survival at 6 months, 73% at 1 year if stable first week.
  • Median overall survival ~567 days (1.5 years) for treated dogs.
  • Severe/resting symptoms (Class IV) have poorer outlook (weeks to months).
  • Negative factors: right-heart failure, high biomarkers (NT-proBNP), severe functional class.

7. Ask A Vet Home Support 🏡

  • Track cough, respiratory rate, fainting episodes, and energy levels.
  • Reminders for meds—sildenafil, pimobendan, diuretics.
  • Upload photos/video: breathing efforts, posture changes.
  • Alerts for signs like cyanosis, ascites, exercise decline.
  • Schedule rechecks: echo, X‑ray, biomarkers.

🔍 Key Takeaways

  • Pulmonary hypertension is serious, but manageable with echo diagnosis + targeted therapy.
  • Sildenafil ± pimobendan forms cornerstone treatment strategy.
  • Find and treat underlying conditions to improve long-term outcomes.
  • Home monitoring via Ask A Vet improves early detection and quality of life.

🩺 Conclusion ❤️

Pulmonary hypertension need not be a death sentence. With 2025’s advanced diagnostics, tailored medications, and supportive care—including home monitoring from Ask A Vet—many dogs live comfortably for months or years. Early detection and ongoing support empower both pets and families. 🐾✨

Dr Duncan Houston BVSc – combining cardiology expertise with compassionate, remote owner support.

Visit AskAVet.com and download the Ask A Vet app to monitor breathing, manage medications, schedule follow-ups, and stay connected with your vet from home. ❤️

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