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The Thoracic Inlet Heart Size, a New Approach to Radiographic Cardiac Measurement.

David Marbella FernándezVerónica GarcíaAlexis José SantanaJosé Alberto Montoya-Alonso
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2023)
In 1995, the Vertebral Heart Size (VHS) method for measuring the cardiac silhouette on thoracic radiographs was published, becoming a quantifiable and objective reference way of assessing the heart size. Since then, many studies have showed that VHS is influenced by breed variations, vertebral malformations, reference points selection, and short and long axes dimensions conversion into vertebral units. The Thoracic Inlet Heart Size (TIHS) normalizes heart size to body size using the thoracic inlet length. The lengths of the long and short axes of the heart of 144 clinically normal dogs were measured on right lateral thoracic radiographs. The sum of both measures was indexed to the thoracic inlet length. For comparison, dogs of the most represented breeds in our hospital were selected to measure their heart size using the TIHS protocol. The mean TIHS value for the population studied was 2.86 ± 0.27, and 90% of dogs had a TIHS value of less than 3.25. There was no difference in TIHS between male and female, and between small and large dogs ( p -value < 0.01). There was no difference in the TIHS value between Yorkshire Terrier, Chihuahua, and Labrador retriever breeds, and between each of those three breeds and the general population. The TIHS is a simple, straightforward and accurate way to measure heart size.
Keyphrases
  • heart failure
  • spinal cord
  • atrial fibrillation
  • healthcare
  • randomized controlled trial
  • emergency department
  • bone mineral density
  • systematic review
  • spinal cord injury
  • genetic diversity
  • body composition
  • case control