Davis K E, Visser L C, Boon J A, Ross E S, Sankisov J N, Laws A C
James L. Voss Veterinary Teaching Hospital, College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Colorado State University, Campus Delivery 1678 Fort Colins, CO 80523, USA.
J Vet Cardiol. 2025 Feb;57:27-38. doi: 10.1016/j.jvc.2024.10.008. Epub 2024 Nov 7.
This study aimed to compare estimates of stroke volume (SV) from different anatomic sites and to generate reference intervals for indices such as shunt volume (ShuntVol) or regurgitant volume (RegVol) in a large sample of healthy dogs.
ANIMALS, MATERIALS AND METHODS: Ninety healthy dogs underwent an echocardiogram, where SV was assessed at the level of the pulmonary valve (SV), aortic valve (SV), mitral valve (SV), and left ventricle using the difference in end-diastolic volume and end-systolic volume from a right parasternal long-axis four-chamber view (SV) and left apical four-chamber view (SV). Eight dogs underwent repeated echocardiograms by the same operator on three different days and by three different operators on the same day. Bland-Altman plots and 95% reference intervals were generated. Reproducibility was described using coefficients of variation and reproducibility coefficients.
Mean differences (95% limits of agreement) for ShuntVol (SV-SV), RegVol (SV-SV), RegVol (SV-SV), and RegVol (SV-SV) were as follows: -0.14 (-0.72, 0.44), -0.05 (-0.59, 0.48), -0.16 (-0.71, 0.39), and 0.12 (-0.76, 1.00) mL/kg, respectively. All but RegVol showed significant (P<0.01) fixed bias. Reference intervals for ShuntVol, RegVol, RegVol, and RegVol were as follows: -0.85-0.64, -0.65-0.58, -0.77-0.52, and -0.91-1.06 mL/kg, respectively. Intra-operator and interoperator coefficients of variation were lowest for SV and highest for SV and SV.
Echocardiographic estimates of SV are not interchangeable and can exhibit wide limits of agreement. Reference intervals help provide a frame of reference to assess disease severity in dogs with a shunting lesion (ShuntVol) and mitral regurgitation (RegVol).