Effect of Breed and Body Weight on Echocardiographic Values in Four Breeds of Dogs of Differing Somatotype

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Abstract

Eighty normal dogs of four morphologically disparate breeds (Pembroke Welsh Corgi, Miniature Poodle, Afghan Hound, Golden Retriever) (twenty of each breed), were studied by echocardiography to determine the importance of breed and weight in establishing normal echocardiographic reference ranges. Echocardiographic measurements included left‐ventricular chamber dimension at systole and end‐diastole, right‐ventricular chamber dimension at end‐diastole, interventricular septal thickness at systole and end‐diastole, left‐ventricular free wall thickness at systole and end‐diastole, E‐point septal separation, aortic root dimension at end‐diastole, left atrial dimension, and fractional shortening. Analyses of covariance indicated that for all measurements except right‐ventricular chamber dimension, the means were significantly different among breeds, after the differences in weight were taken into account. Echocardiographic measurements are variable even within the same breed. Breed must be considered in establishing echocardiographic measurement reference ranges. Echocardiographic values for each breed are presented. (Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine 1992; 6:220–224) Copyright © 1992, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved

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Morrison, S. A., Moise, N. S., Scarlett, J., Mohammed, H., & Yeager, A. E. (1992). Effect of Breed and Body Weight on Echocardiographic Values in Four Breeds of Dogs of Differing Somatotype. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 6(4), 220–224. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1939-1676.1992.tb00342.x

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