Auscultation versus Doppler - This subject seems to
go round and round. I understand that the following would be more correct:
If a dog is auscultated BY A CARDIOLOGIST WITH GREAT EXPERIENCE IN BOXER
HEART TESTING (such as a few selected ones we have in the UK) and this dog
is found not to have a heart murmur, then it will not be found to have SAS
on subsequent Doppler either.
But in practice cardiologists vary, experience even
among this specialised group varies, dogs can even vary as they are being
tested so that screening has to take more than a few minutes, etc, etc, so
there are all kinds of loop holes in the above basic principle.
Beyond this, there are the few exceptional cases
where seemingly murmur-free dogs really have developed both murmurs and
stenosis, as determined by Doppler, with age. This exceptional scenario has
been found with dogs that uniquely had an abnormality develop within the
aortic valve itself, not below (sub-aortic stenosis) as is commonly found.
So, the bottom line is still – with the necessary
level of testing – auscultation still picks up LOWER LEVELS OF THE CONDITION
WHICH IN MORE SEVERE FORM CAUSES SAS than Doppler. (It’s all a play on
word’s, which gives a mixed message. I think when vets talk about SAS they
are talking about a dog being affected to a level they can recognise by
Doppler blood velocities (high). Lower levels of the effect, meaning no
actual stenosis (narrowing) but still lumps and bumps which are milder
effects, but which do not represent stenosis proper, still cause sound.)
And as has been pointed out elsewhere auscultation
is far more effective for a national control scheme and for single kennels
testing numbers of dogs over the years.
At all levels auscultation wins – especially if you
want to achieve something.
I would emphasise that the view on auscultation vs.
Doppler is not my own personal one, but rather what has been hammered into
me over the years by our own cardiologist/s – and to me it does make sense.
And then of course, there is probably more
variation with Doppler scoring than auscultation.
Auscultation recognises sound, sound is caused by
any type of anomaly within the aorta, lumps and bumps (as in the noise of a
rocky stream) as well as a more severe effect that causes partial closure
and forces the blood to travel faster making a noise (as the end of a hose).
So in principle, the auscultation picks up the minor manifestations of AS
that do not impair blood flow – it is more sensitive for effects that are
the basis of the thickening it detects abnormality but not necessarily
function, and Doppler measures function – by blood velocity.
Doppler "passes" can therefore be achieved in
auscultation positive dogs by the fact that there is not a definite
narrowing, not increased blood flow, only the turbulence detected by
auscultation. So Doppler is not expected to pick up Grade 1s or even many
Grade 2s. This is at the level of velocity currently defined as normal. In
the UK the "pass" rate has clearly been set too high at 2.0 m/s.
Beyond this there is liable to be as big or bigger
variation in Doppler scoring by different vets than even with auscultation.
The quote here is that it took our lead cardiologists 18 months of scoring
every day to begin to get consistent results.
The positive for Doppler is that it clearly defines
the disease in sufficiently affected dogs – which valve is involved and even
perhaps where, within, below, above the valve, and presents a definitive
quantitative diagnosis and prognosis in sufficiently affected dogs. It is
the classic tool for this purpose.
Physiological murmurs are often talked about but I
am not aware of any dog with a minor murmur that has been found on
pathology/autopsy to have a normal AS – free heart. Clearly there are minor
murmurs in puppies which are transitory and do not relate to adult
conditions. And murmur grade is highly sensitive to external effects like
excitement, activity or anything that makes the heart beat faster. Test
conditions have to be standard. This is central to current research: are
there any boxers that have absolutely normal hearts, what influences grades,
and velocity? I am pleading with breeders to retest some of there Grade 0
dogs to see if any always grade as such, but!!! And one would then want to
see what the pups heart status is when both parents are absolutely free of
murmurs. But again!!!
All the above is specific to Boxers, please note.
In Newfoundland’s, for example, with their big barrel chests, then
auscultation is not so valuable and Doppler has to be used.
Whatever the arguments, the UK system is working
and it has to work on the basis of the breeding data – given appropriate
breeder action.
Puppy Handout Sheet
UK Boxer AS Articles
UK Boxer Heart List