Long-term relief of obstruction in a dog with double-chambered right ventricle using combined cutting balloon and high-pressure balloon dilation.

J Vet Cardiol

Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, 601 Vernon L. Tharp Street, Columbus, OH, 43220, USA.

Published: August 2021

A 4-month-old intact female Golden Retriever dog was diagnosed with double-chambered right ventricle (DCRV) without infundibular stenosis, tricuspid valve dysplasia, and subsequent severe right atrial enlargement and was referred for combined cutting balloon and high-pressure balloon dilation. On presentation, these diagnoses were confirmed, and the peak systolic pressure gradient across the DCRV obstructive lesion assessed by continuous wave Doppler interrogation was 80 mm Hg. The obstructive lesion within the mid-right ventricle had a diameter of 6 mm through which blood flowed from the proximal right ventricular (RV) chamber to the distal RV chamber. The following day, general anesthesia was induced, and a minimally invasive balloon dilation was performed. A cutting balloon was inflated across the mid-RV obstructive lesion, followed by an inflation of a high-pressure balloon across this lesion. The high-pressure balloon catheter that was used had a diameter roughly 1.5 times the diameter of the pulmonary annulus. The following day, echocardiographic evaluation of the patient revealed a peak systolic pressure gradient across the DCRV obstructive lesion of 16 mm Hg, with a RV diameter at the level of obstruction of 11 mm. Twelve months later, the dog remains asymptomatic, right atrial size has decreased, and has a peak systolic pressure gradient across the DCRV lesion of 20 mm Hg.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvc.2021.06.004DOI Listing

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