Abstract

In avian medicine, Doppler sonographic techniques are used to visualize and estimate blood flow in the heart. In the literature there is a lack of standardized studies of the use of color Doppler flow on healthy avian species. For this purpose, we examined blood flow in the heart in the four-chamber view of clinically healthy awake racing pigeons (n = 43) by color flow Doppler sonography. With this technique the diastolic and systolic blood flow in the heart chambers and the heart valve regions were well visualized. However, the pulse repetition frequency must be adapted to the specific blood flow velocities of the heart region to be measured to reduce aliasing in higher velocities and to visualize blood flow of lower velocities. With the help of color Doppler imaging in the four-chamber view, typical physiological atrial and ventricular blood flow vortex formations were visualized in the avian heart for the first time. In the left ventricle an asymmetric vortex ring in the passive and active ventricular filling, in the right ventricle a great counter-clockwise blood vortex in the active ventricular filling, in the left atrium a vortex clockwise, and in the right atrium counter-clockwise were observed. The knowledge of these physiological blood flow vortices is important to identify pathological blood flow.

Highlights

  • The four-chambered avian heart is functionally comparable to the mammalian heart, with a left and right ventricle and two atria [1,2,3,4]

  • Adequate Doppler sonographic examinations of the diastolic and systolic blood flow were possible in all 43 racing pigeons in the heart rate range of 220.5 ± 41.3 heart beats per minute and 219.1 ± 34.7 heart beats per minute

  • The significant differences between the diastolic and systolic blood flow velocities led to different sonographic settings (PRF) for the visualization of these different blood flows

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Summary

Introduction

The four-chambered avian heart is functionally comparable to the mammalian heart, with a left and right ventricle and two atria [1,2,3,4]. Unique to avian species is the anatomy of the atrioventricular (AV) valves. The left AV valve is formed as a membranous tricuspid AV valve with a longer septal cusp, similar to the anatomical structure of mammalian species. The function of the left AV valve is a passive closure of the AV orifice depending on the pressure gradient. The muscular structure of the right AV valve allows an active closure of the right AV orifice and participation of this valve in the pumping function of the right ventricle [5,6]

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