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Vet’s 2025 Guide to Canine Pulmonic Stenosis 🩺 Diagnosis, Treatment & Prognosis

  • 79 days ago
  • 7 min read
Vet’s 2025 Guide to Canine Pulmonic Stenosis 🩺 Diagnosis, Treatment & Prognosis

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Vet’s 2025 Guide to Canine Pulmonic Stenosis 🩺 Diagnosis, Treatment & Prognosis

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

💡 What Is Pulmonic Stenosis?

Pulmonic stenosis is a congenital narrowing at or near the pulmonic valve, hindering blood flow from the right ventricle into the pulmonary artery. Over time, this increases pressure in the right ventricle, leading to muscle thickening and possible right-sided heart failure.

1. Who Is Affected & How Common Is It?

  • One of the most common congenital heart defects—31–34% of cases.
  • More frequent in breeds like English/French Bulldogs, Beagles, Boxers, Terriers, Samoyeds, Labs, and Newfies.
  • Form is usually valvar (leaflet thickening/fusion), though sub- or supravalvular narrowing may occur.

2. Clinical Signs ⚠️

  • Murmur: a loud systolic ejection murmur at the left heart base, sometimes with a palpable thrill.
  • Mild cases: often asymptomatic, normal lifespan with monitoring.
  • Moderate-to-severe: exercise intolerance, tiredness, fainting (syncope), abdominal fluid accumulation (ascites), sudden death risk (~30%).
  • Arrhythmias: rare but possible with severe disease.

3. Severity Grading & Pathophysiology 📈

  • Based on Doppler echocardiography velocity and pressure gradient:
  • Mild: gradient <50 mmHg. Usually harmless, may require yearly monitoring.
  • Moderate: 50–80 mmHg—clinical signs may appear, more often candidates for treatment.
  • Severe: >80 mmHg—risk of right ventricular hypertrophy, arrhythmias, heart failure.

4. Diagnostic Work-Up 🧪

  • Physical Exam: loud murmur, thrill, jugular distension, ascites.
  • X-rays: right ventricular enlargement, post-stenotic dilation of pulmonary artery.
  • Echocardiography: gold standard—shows leaflet thickening, annular narrowing, right ventricular muscle thickening, measures pressure gradient via Doppler.
  • ECG: deep S-waves in Lead II indicate RV hypertrophy; arrhythmia detection.

5. Treatment Options ❤️

5.1 Balloon Valvuloplasty (BVP)

  • Recommended for moderate-to-severe valvar PS (gradient >60–80 mmHg).
  • Minimally invasive catheter procedure under fluoroscopic guidance—balloon inflation fractures fused leaflets.
  • Success: ≥50% reduction in gradient reduces murmur and clinical signs; improves survival and quality of life.
  • Complications: arrhythmias, hemorrhage—rare.

5.2 Surgical Interventions

  • For mixed or complex stenosis, options include pulmonary artery stenting, open patch grafting.
  • Stenting: a minimally invasive alternative; watch for complications like stent migration/fracture.

5.3 Medical Management

  • Atenolol (beta-blocker): reduces heart rate/oxygen demand—symptomatic relief, adjunctive therapy.
  • Diuretics: for right-sided heart failure signs like ascites.
  • Anti-arrhythmics, if needed for rhythm abnormalities.

6. Prognosis & Follow-Up 📅

  • Mild PS: excellent prognosis, normal life span with routine monitoring.
  • Post-BVP: favourable long-term outcomes; many dogs live symptom-free years after treatment.
  • Severe untreated: guarded prognosis—high risk of arrhythmias, sudden death, CHF.
  • Recurrence: some restenosis possible—follow-up echo at 3 months and annually.

7. Ask A Vet Home Support 🏡

  • Log energy, fainting spells, and murmur changes via the app.
  • Receive medication reminders—atenolol, diuretics.
  • Video/photo uploads—exercise tolerance, breathing effort.
  • Alerts for ascites, laboured breathing, syncopal episodes.
  • Schedule follow-up echocardiograms, X-rays, cardio-checks.

🔍 Key Takeaways

  • Pulmonic stenosis is a common congenital defect with variable severity.
  • A loud murmur in young/brachycephalic dogs should prompt echo.
  • Balloon valvuloplasty is the gold standard for moderate-to-severe cases.
  • Mild cases often live full lives with monitoring; untreated severe cases carry risk.
  • Combining veterinary care with Ask A Vet monitoring supports improved outcomes.

🩺 Conclusion ❤️

Canine pulmonic stenosis is manageable in 2025—with early identification, echocardiographic assessment, and intervention like balloon valvuloplasty, many dogs thrive long-term. Whether you're navigating mild murmurs or advanced disease, Ask A Vet ensures owners stay on top of symptoms, medications, and follow-ups, empowering both pups and families to live well. 🐶✨

Dr Duncan Houston BVSc – leading compassionate cardiac care with outpatient support and expert guidance.

Visit AskAVet.com and download the Ask A Vet app to monitor murmurs, schedule treatments, track meds, and upload videos—all from your phone. ❤️

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