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Canine Cardiac Disease

How Common Heart Murmurs In Dogs Could Be The Result Of CCD

If your dog gets diagnosed with a common heart murmur problem, it may be a sign of canine cardiac disease.

According to the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine, a heart murmur results from blood flow running through the heart that is abnormal. Some heart murmurs are perfectly normal while others, similar to those heard in aging dogs, may be a sign that some type of heart disease is prevalent. The most common cardiac diseases in dogs include:

1. Congenital birth defects that show up when a puppy is young.
2. Degenerative valve disease (heart valve leaks) that mostly affect older or middle-aged dogs.
3. Loss of heart muscle tissue that is typically seen in young dogs or middle-aged larger dog breeds.

Detecting The Disease
Heart disease may not show up or be detected until it has reached a point where your dog experiences heart failure, collapse, or even sudden death. Your veterinarian can certainly check your dog out for heart murmurs by using a stethoscope. However, as the dog owner, your responsibility is to be on alert for certain signs such as difficulty in breathing, coughing, intolerance to exercise, or a swollen abdomen (caused by fluid retention).

Canine cardiac disease can further be checked for by specific information regarding your dog’s breed type, age, chest x-rays, blood pressure measurements, and EKG readings. For a definitive diagnosis, an ultrasound of your dog’s heart is required.

Treatment
Treating your dog back to good health will depend entirely upon the stage of the disease and how severely it has affected other parts of the body. If your puppy is young and has a congenital defect, it may be surgically removed.

Heart disease that is acquired later in your dog’s life requires heavy lifestyle management and changes in living. Such changes include maintaining a healthy body weight, additional exercise (or reduced activity depending upon your dog’s condition), special cardiac diets, and specific medications that can be used to reduce stress put on your dog’s heart from his condition.

The prognosis for dogs that have canine heart disease will vary. Some dogs may be fortunate enough to have successful long-term care. Others may have a shorter lifespan ranging from a few weeks to a few years. It is important to keep in mind that the earlier your dog’s condition is assessed, the easier it will be to treat and the odds will be greater that your dog or puppy will enjoy a long, healthy life.

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Comments

6 Responses to “Canine Cardiac Disease”

  1. master from Herbal Vaporizer on February 28th, 2009 8:37 am

    This is a great tip, I’ve been a dog lover for a long time.

  2. Joseph on August 23rd, 2009 3:14 pm

    What a great site and informative, Bookmarking

  3. Signs of heart failure on December 12th, 2009 8:05 am

    I have looked at many sites on this subject and not come across a site such as yours which tells everyone everything that they need to know. I have bookmarked your site. Can anyone else suggest any other related topics that I can look for to find out further information?

  4. from collapsible dog crate on January 1st, 2010 11:23 pm

    Thank you for this information. I’ll make sure my beloved dog’s vet will check for CCD.

  5. Souhail from Diagnostic Medical Sonography on January 27th, 2010 2:49 am

    In most cases, CCD can be treated if detected early! If you have a puppy that has a birth defect usually surgery can eliminate the problem. When heart disease is detected later in life, be ready for a whole lifestyle change and overhaul!

  6. Alyssa on April 10th, 2010 5:21 am

    We lost a dog to this.. very sad.. there we hardy any symptoms at all until he passed away, :(

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