Patent Ductus Arteriosus

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Patent ductus arteriosus. Courtesy of A. Jefferies


Also known as PDA

  • Occurs in all animals
  • Young animals have a greater risk
  • Very common in dogs
  • Not very common in cats

Signalment

Genetics & Predisposed Breeds: Toy Breeds (Yorkshire Terrier, Pomeranian, Maltese, Toy Poodles); Miniature Poodles, Shetland Sheepdogs, German Shepherds, Collies

  • Greater occurrence in females

Description

  • Persistence of the ductus arteriosus after birth


  • During fetal life, the ductus arteriosus connects the pulmonary artery to the descending aorta. This fetal vessel allows most of the blood to bypass the developing lungs and go directly to the aorta and systemic circulation. In fetal life oxygen is provided by the placenta while the lungs are developing.


  • At birth, the animal takes a breath of air and uses its lungs for the first time. High levels of oxygen from the pulmonary vasculature enter the circulation and the ductus arteriosus responds by contracting the smooth muscles lining its vessel wall. The functional closure of the ductus arteriosus occurs within 2-3 days after birth and with time it will become an anatomical closure. However, some animals have a ductus arteriosus that doesn't respond to the increased oxygen at birth and remains open (patent).


  • After birth PDA causes a reversal of blood flow from the higher pressure of the descending aorta through the ductus arteriosus to the pulmonary artery and into the lungs. This is known as left-to-right shunting. The shunting of blood in this manner overwhelms the pulmonary vasculature and the left side of the heart. The increased volume of blood from the lungs travels to the left atrium and left ventricle which respond to the added pressure by dilation and hypertrophy. As a result, PDA can eventually lead to pulmonary edema and left-sided congestive heart failure.


  • Normally the pulmonary circulation is equipped to handle increased volumes of blood without pulmonary arterial pressure changes. However, sometimes the increased blood volume in the lungs causes gross changes to the pulmonary arterioles causing pulmonary hypertension and raised pulmonary arterial pressures. If the pressure is high enough, it can cause a reverse PDA (right-to-left shunt) and unoxygenated blood will bypass the lungs heading straight for the descending aorta and the systemic circulation.

Diagnosis

History & Clinical Signs

-Signs of left sided congestive heart failure

-Exercise intolerance

-Differential cyanosis (Reverse PDA)

-Hindlimb weakness (Reverse PDA)

-Asymptomatic

Physical Exam

PDA

-Systolic & diastolic continuous machinery murmur (Left side of the heart is the loudest)

-Precordial thrill (Palpable after a murmur)

-Waterhammer pulses (A forceful pulse that immediately collapses)


Reverse PDA

-Differential cyanosis (Normal oral mucus membranes, cyanotic membranes everywhere else)

-Hyperviscosity (Increased PCV from hypoxia-mediated polycythemia)

Radiographic Findings

PDA

-Left atrial & ventricular enlargement

-Pulmonary overcirculation

-Dorsoventral view shows three bulges: aorta (1 o’clock), pulmonary artery (2 o’clock), left auricle (3 o’clock) positions

-Signs of left-sided congestive heart failure (pulmonary congestion, edema)


Reverse PDA

-Right ventricular enlargement

-Dilation of the pulmonary trunk and arteries

-Left ventricular enlargement

Echocardiographic Findings

PDA

-Left atrial & ventricular enlargement

-Dilation of pulmonary artery

-PDA might be visualized


Doppler can show abnormal flow


Reverse PDA

-Right ventricular enlargement

-Left ventricular enlargement


Doppler can show abnormal flow

Electrocardiographic (ECG)

PDA

-Classic signs for left atrial enlargement (wide P wave)

- Classic signs for left ventricular enlargement (tall R wave, wide QRS)

-Atrial & ventricular arrhythmias may be present


Reverse PDA

-Classic signs of right sided heart enlargement

Treatment

PDA

-Surgical ligation of the ductus arteriosus (2-4 months of age)

-Animals with congestive heart failure need stabilization of heart failure before surgery


Reverse PDA

-Surgery is contraindicated

-Exercise Restriction

-Phlebotomy (Bleeding to keep PCV at normal levels)


Prognosis

PDA

-Very good prognosis with surgical treatment

-Poor prognosis if large PDAs are left untreated


Reverse PDA

-Poor prognosis

From Pathology

Ductus Arteriosus shunts blood from the Pulmonary Artery to the Aorta in the foetus to bypass the lungs. Usually closes shortly after birth due to smooth muscle contraction in repsonse to increased arterial oxygen tension. When patent after birth, blood flows along the pressure gradient, left to right, leading to pulmonary hypertension. If the hypertension is significant, as with larger defects, right sided pressure may increase enough to allow reversal of flow through the PDA and will result in cyanosis. Reverse shunting is rare.

Incidence:

Patent ductus arteriosus. Courtesy of A. Jefferies
  • Uncommon in cats.
  • More common in dogs with distinct female predisposition.
  • Predisposed breeds include; CKCS, Border Collie, GSD, Poodles.
  • Research into PDAs in dogs has revealed a genetic component influencing the maturation of collagen.
  • May be a normal finding in lambs and piglets up to 2 weeks of age.

Clinical Signs:

  • Continuous machinery murmur at left heart base.
  • Water-Hammer pulse (rapid diastolic decline).
  • Variable other signs depending on size of defect E.g. syncope, cyanosis, exercise intolerance etc.
  • May progress to left sided heart failure and so pulmonary oedema.

Diagnosis:

  • Left atrial and left ventricular enlargement radiologically and on ECG due to volume overload.
  • Pulmonary overcirculation (enlargement of pulmonary arteries and veins) on radiology.
  • DV radiographs show a three knuckled appearance; enlargement of:
    • Aortic arch.
    • Pulmonary artery.
    • Left auricular appendage.
  • PDA difficult to image on echocardiography but Doppler imaging may be useful.

Treatment:

  • Surgical ligation for left to right shunts. Needs stabilisation first.
  • Right to left shunts are not operable.
  • Untreated dogs face 60-70% mortality during their first year of life.

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