A new descriptive study has determined important variations in the classification of congenital birth defects that occur in various dog breeds. These findings are an important step in not only the diagnosis but surgical method and recommended treatments.
In patients with this birth defect, blood contents that would normally be metabolised and detoxified in the liver will bypass this organ, and accumulate in the blood circulation, often resulting in stunted growth, poor muscle development and behavioural abnormalities, such as disorientation and seizures. These defects are known as congenital intrahepatic portosystemic shunts and can also cause less obvious symptoms can also include drinking or urinating too much, vomiting or diarrhoea.
The research, conducted at the RVC’s Queen Mother Hospital for Animals, and in collaboration with the School of Veterinary Medicine in Davis; the University of Tennessee Small Animal Hospital; and the College of Veterinary Medicine in Georgia, sought to analyse and provide exact characterisation of congenital intrahepatic portosystemic shunts (IHPSS) in dogs, which has historically lacked a complete anatomical overview, making diagnosis and treatment processes challenging.
Traditionally classified as right, left or central divisional, this cross-sectional study hypothesised that there would be important variation to this classification and assessed for IHPSS type, insertion and the relationship of the insertion to the primary hepatic veins.
As part of the study, 90 dogs, aged three months to 13 years, which were diagnosed with an intrahepatic shunt via computed tomographic angiography were analysed. In 92 percent of the evaluated IHPSS, a connection to an existing hepatic vein or phrenic vein was seen as hypothesised. Only eight percent of the IHPSS connected directly to the caudal vena cava, the main systemic vein that returns blood to the heart, which was previously thought to be the main route of these anomalous connections.
While the previously defined classification of left, right and central divisional shunt types remains valid, the results show that further subclassifications can be reliably defined based on the hepatic veins with which the shunting vessel communicates, which can, in turn, determine if surgical correction of the defect is possible, and optimally plan for an efficient surgical approach in these aesthetically challenging cases.
Dr Randi Drees, Associate Professor in Veterinary Diagnostic Imaging at the RVC, said:
“The newly introduced classification of the IHPSS based on the individual hepatic venous structure that it inserts through will likely be more reliable than the historical global classification system, as it relies on given anatomical structures that can be investigated with advanced imaging modalities such as angiographic computed tomography, illustrating the deficiencies of the traditional approach.
“We expect the results of this study to change the way radiologists report these birth defects, and therefore optimise communication with the surgeons, improving overall patient care.”