Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease

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Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease. / Chompoosan, C.; Schrøder, A. S.; Bach, M. B.T.; Møgelvang, R.; Willesen, J. L.; Langhorn, R.; Koch, J.

I: Journal of Veterinary Cardiology, Bind 36, 2021, s. 169-179.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Chompoosan, C, Schrøder, AS, Bach, MBT, Møgelvang, R, Willesen, JL, Langhorn, R & Koch, J 2021, 'Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease', Journal of Veterinary Cardiology, bind 36, s. 169-179. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.002

APA

Chompoosan, C., Schrøder, A. S., Bach, M. B. T., Møgelvang, R., Willesen, J. L., Langhorn, R., & Koch, J. (2021). Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease. Journal of Veterinary Cardiology, 36, 169-179. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.002

Vancouver

Chompoosan C, Schrøder AS, Bach MBT, Møgelvang R, Willesen JL, Langhorn R o.a. Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease. Journal of Veterinary Cardiology. 2021;36:169-179. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.002

Author

Chompoosan, C. ; Schrøder, A. S. ; Bach, M. B.T. ; Møgelvang, R. ; Willesen, J. L. ; Langhorn, R. ; Koch, J. / Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease. I: Journal of Veterinary Cardiology. 2021 ; Bind 36. s. 169-179.

Bibtex

@article{efb79186ebb146b4848a55dc94869cf9,
title = "Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease",
abstract = "Introduction: Mitral valve area (MVA) planimetry is used to diagnose and classify mitral stenosis (MS) in humans using two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography (MVA2D and MVA3D). This study aimed to evaluate agreement, feasibility, and observer variability between MVA2D and MVA3D in English Bull Terriers (BT). Our hypotheses were (1) that the MVA of BT is generally smaller than that of breeds with similar body weight and (2) that these techniques could be used to diagnose MS in BTs. Animals: Twenty healthy BTs, 15 healthy Boxers, and 49 BTs with heart disease. Materials and methods: A prospective diagnostic agreement study was conducted. All dogs underwent a thorough clinical examination, conventional transthoracic echocardiography, and three-dimensional echocardiography. Results: Bland–Altman plots (limits of agreement: 0.12–1.5) showed consistent bias and poor agreement between MVA2D and MVA3D. For the 69 BTs, MVA3D (2.1 ± 0.50 cm2) measurements were significantly lower than MVA2D measurements (2.9 ± 0.60 cm2), and healthy BTs had significantly lower MVA parameters than healthy Boxers (p < 0.001). Intraobserver and interobserver variability were excellent for both MVA2D and MVA3D (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.9). Six BTs were diagnosed with MS, with MVA3D less than 1.8 cm2 and a mean transmitral gradient (MTG) of more than 5 mmHg. Conclusions: Both MVA2D and MVA3D are feasible, have low observer variability and can be used to diagnose MS in BTs. For assessing the narrowest orifice area, the preferred method is MVA3D. The smaller MVA in BTs compared to Boxers may indicate some degree of MS.",
keywords = "Boxer, Canine, Mitral stenosis, Mitral valve orifice",
author = "C. Chompoosan and Schr{\o}der, {A. S.} and Bach, {M. B.T.} and R. M{\o}gelvang and Willesen, {J. L.} and R. Langhorn and J. Koch",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 Elsevier B.V.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.002",
language = "English",
volume = "36",
pages = "169--179",
journal = "Journal of Veterinary Cardiology",
issn = "1760-2734",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Transthoracic two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography for the measurement of mitral valve area planimetry in English Bull Terriers with and without heart disease

AU - Chompoosan, C.

AU - Schrøder, A. S.

AU - Bach, M. B.T.

AU - Møgelvang, R.

AU - Willesen, J. L.

AU - Langhorn, R.

AU - Koch, J.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Elsevier B.V.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Introduction: Mitral valve area (MVA) planimetry is used to diagnose and classify mitral stenosis (MS) in humans using two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography (MVA2D and MVA3D). This study aimed to evaluate agreement, feasibility, and observer variability between MVA2D and MVA3D in English Bull Terriers (BT). Our hypotheses were (1) that the MVA of BT is generally smaller than that of breeds with similar body weight and (2) that these techniques could be used to diagnose MS in BTs. Animals: Twenty healthy BTs, 15 healthy Boxers, and 49 BTs with heart disease. Materials and methods: A prospective diagnostic agreement study was conducted. All dogs underwent a thorough clinical examination, conventional transthoracic echocardiography, and three-dimensional echocardiography. Results: Bland–Altman plots (limits of agreement: 0.12–1.5) showed consistent bias and poor agreement between MVA2D and MVA3D. For the 69 BTs, MVA3D (2.1 ± 0.50 cm2) measurements were significantly lower than MVA2D measurements (2.9 ± 0.60 cm2), and healthy BTs had significantly lower MVA parameters than healthy Boxers (p < 0.001). Intraobserver and interobserver variability were excellent for both MVA2D and MVA3D (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.9). Six BTs were diagnosed with MS, with MVA3D less than 1.8 cm2 and a mean transmitral gradient (MTG) of more than 5 mmHg. Conclusions: Both MVA2D and MVA3D are feasible, have low observer variability and can be used to diagnose MS in BTs. For assessing the narrowest orifice area, the preferred method is MVA3D. The smaller MVA in BTs compared to Boxers may indicate some degree of MS.

AB - Introduction: Mitral valve area (MVA) planimetry is used to diagnose and classify mitral stenosis (MS) in humans using two-dimensional and three-dimensional echocardiography (MVA2D and MVA3D). This study aimed to evaluate agreement, feasibility, and observer variability between MVA2D and MVA3D in English Bull Terriers (BT). Our hypotheses were (1) that the MVA of BT is generally smaller than that of breeds with similar body weight and (2) that these techniques could be used to diagnose MS in BTs. Animals: Twenty healthy BTs, 15 healthy Boxers, and 49 BTs with heart disease. Materials and methods: A prospective diagnostic agreement study was conducted. All dogs underwent a thorough clinical examination, conventional transthoracic echocardiography, and three-dimensional echocardiography. Results: Bland–Altman plots (limits of agreement: 0.12–1.5) showed consistent bias and poor agreement between MVA2D and MVA3D. For the 69 BTs, MVA3D (2.1 ± 0.50 cm2) measurements were significantly lower than MVA2D measurements (2.9 ± 0.60 cm2), and healthy BTs had significantly lower MVA parameters than healthy Boxers (p < 0.001). Intraobserver and interobserver variability were excellent for both MVA2D and MVA3D (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.9). Six BTs were diagnosed with MS, with MVA3D less than 1.8 cm2 and a mean transmitral gradient (MTG) of more than 5 mmHg. Conclusions: Both MVA2D and MVA3D are feasible, have low observer variability and can be used to diagnose MS in BTs. For assessing the narrowest orifice area, the preferred method is MVA3D. The smaller MVA in BTs compared to Boxers may indicate some degree of MS.

KW - Boxer

KW - Canine

KW - Mitral stenosis

KW - Mitral valve orifice

U2 - 10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.002

DO - 10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.002

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34298447

AN - SCOPUS:85110786297

VL - 36

SP - 169

EP - 179

JO - Journal of Veterinary Cardiology

JF - Journal of Veterinary Cardiology

SN - 1760-2734

ER -

ID: 275830121