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Echo Interpretation

Sonopath Forum

Echo Interpretation

Billy is a 12 year old Pomeranian with a grade 2-3/6 HSM. Chest X-rays indicate R sided heart enlargement. I suggested an echo to the owner and she agreed. 

Billy is a 12 year old Pomeranian with a grade 2-3/6 HSM. Chest X-rays indicate R sided heart enlargement. I suggested an echo to the owner and she agreed. 

When I did the echo I was able to confirm a mitral insufficiency but I was unable to confirm the right sided enlargement. On one of the Cine loops it appears there is turbulent pulmonary flow but doppler doesn’t confirm this. I could also not find a tricuspid regurgitation. Am I overestimating R sided enlargement on the x-rays? On the 4 chamber R parasternal it appears that the R side of the heart is normal. I have other images and cine loops if further clarification is needed.

Comments

EL

 
 
The right atrium in 4

 
 

The right atrium in 4 chamber is 1:1 in your views with the left atrium and should be 2/3 the size of the left atrium so when the RA = LA especially when the LA is bigger than normal then by default the RA is big. The LA loook bordeline here so an RA=LA means right RA enlargement-mild. Not likely clinical but this will help in justifying a cranial waist enlargement on the rads but would need a TR doppler to assess for PHT and check the hepatic veins to see if congested. Cool mitral prolapse!

Here are some peter modler  (http://sonopath.com/about/specialists/peter-modler-dvm-dipl-tzt) echo pearls that help the interpretation:

Peter’s Echo Pearls
2-d measurements taken from the inner edge and m-mode measurements are taken from the leading edge.

1. Normal echo interpretation concepts:

  1. LVFW is 3.5 to 4.5 of LVIDd

  2. RV is 1/3 of LV in 4-chamber view

  3. RVFW is 1⁄2 of IVS or LVFW width

  4. LV must be straight as is the Atrial Septum

  5. RA must be < LA diameter

  6. If all this is true then no hemodynamically significant problem will be present

    with exception of arrhythmias.

1

  • Patient
    to assess if the murmur is significant or not

  • M-mode must be performed form right parasternal 4-chamber and LV short axis view. The measurements must be similar. Don’t use 5-chamber view for dogs in m-mode.

  • PW Doppler used to find turbulence and local velocities, CW Doppler is used to find maximum velocities

  • Keep an eye on the frame rate, reduce the imaging depth as far as possible and reduce the sector angle as much as possible.

  • Reduce the line density to optimize the image and color flow.

 
EL

 
 
The right atrium in 4

 
 

The right atrium in 4 chamber is 1:1 in your views with the left atrium and should be 2/3 the size of the left atrium so when the RA = LA especially when the LA is bigger than normal then by default the RA is big. The LA loook bordeline here so an RA=LA means right RA enlargement-mild. Not likely clinical but this will help in justifying a cranial waist enlargement on the rads but would need a TR doppler to assess for PHT and check the hepatic veins to see if congested. Cool mitral prolapse!

Here are some peter modler  (http://sonopath.com/about/specialists/peter-modler-dvm-dipl-tzt) echo pearls that help the interpretation:

Peter’s Echo Pearls
2-d measurements taken from the inner edge and m-mode measurements are taken from the leading edge.

1. Normal echo interpretation concepts:

  1. LVFW is 3.5 to 4.5 of LVIDd

  2. RV is 1/3 of LV in 4-chamber view

  3. RVFW is 1⁄2 of IVS or LVFW width

  4. LV must be straight as is the Atrial Septum

  5. RA must be < LA diameter

  6. If all this is true then no hemodynamically significant problem will be present

    with exception of arrhythmias.

1

  • Patient
    to assess if the murmur is significant or not

  • M-mode must be performed form right parasternal 4-chamber and LV short axis view. The measurements must be similar. Don’t use 5-chamber view for dogs in m-mode.

  • PW Doppler used to find turbulence and local velocities, CW Doppler is used to find maximum velocities

  • Keep an eye on the frame rate, reduce the imaging depth as far as possible and reduce the sector angle as much as possible.

  • Reduce the line density to optimize the image and color flow.

 
randyhermandvm

EL or PM – maybe you can

EL or PM – maybe you can clarify my thinking on this case.

1. I have seen a large Mitral Regurg on this dog

2. Pulmonary spectral flow indicates a maximum velocity of 0.74 cm/sec- so pulmonic stenosis in not an issue

3. If the R atrium is enlarged as you say, I would suspect there is probably pulmonary hypertension secondary to the mitral valvular disease.

4. Why can’t I verify a tricuspid regurg. Am I just not seeing it? It there any other way you can explain the changes I am seeing.

Cine loop 3 is my attempt at CFI to verify the Tricuspid regurg. Are my settings off?

This dog is coming back on Friday and I will try to see if I missed a tricuspid regurg.

I hope I am making myself clear.

I am also adding the original chest x-rays. Is there not R sided heart enlargement here?

randyhermandvm

EL or PM – maybe you can

EL or PM – maybe you can clarify my thinking on this case.

1. I have seen a large Mitral Regurg on this dog

2. Pulmonary spectral flow indicates a maximum velocity of 0.74 cm/sec- so pulmonic stenosis in not an issue

3. If the R atrium is enlarged as you say, I would suspect there is probably pulmonary hypertension secondary to the mitral valvular disease.

4. Why can’t I verify a tricuspid regurg. Am I just not seeing it? It there any other way you can explain the changes I am seeing.

Cine loop 3 is my attempt at CFI to verify the Tricuspid regurg. Are my settings off?

This dog is coming back on Friday and I will try to see if I missed a tricuspid regurg.

I hope I am making myself clear.

I am also adding the original chest x-rays. Is there not R sided heart enlargement here?