Abstract

BackgroundRadiography is useful to determine left atrial (LA) size when echocardiography is not available. Recently, the authors have described Radiographic Left Atrial Dimension (RLAD) as a new radiographic measurement to assess LA size. The objective of this study was to assess the clinical usefulness of 2 new radiographic measurements to detect and quantify left atrial enlargement (LAE) compared to RLAD and using left atrium to aortic root (LA/Ao) ratio as gold standard. These new measurements, bronchus-to-spine (Br-Spine) and RLAD-to-spine (RLAD-Spine) may be more precise in cases were LA boundaries are not well defined. Fifty dogs, 25 with and 25 without LAE were recruited. Reference LA/Ao ratio was assessed by 2D echocardiography and LAE was considered if LA/Ao > 1.6. Br-spine was measured as a straight vertical line from the main stem bronchus to the ventral border of the vertebra situated immediately dorsal to the heart base. RLAD-Spine was measured from RLAD endpoint perpendicularly to spine. The correlation of RLAD, Br-Spine and RLAD-Spine methods with LA/Ao and their sensitivity and specificity for detecting LAE were calculated. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves were used to estimate the optimal cut-off for each method.ResultsCorrelations between Br-Spine, RLAD-Spine, RLAD and LA/Ao ratio were − 0.66, − 0.76 and 0.89 respectively (P < 0.001). Sensitivity at the optimal cut-off values for detecting LAE were 32.0, 64.0 and 96.0%, respectively. Specificity was 96.0% in all cases.ConclusionBr-Spine and RLAD-Spine were less sensitive radiographic measurements than RLAD in detecting LAE in dogs. Both Br-Spine and RLAD-Spine may not be good alternatives to RLAD.

Highlights

  • Radiography is useful to determine left atrial (LA) size when echocardiography is not available

  • In this study we hypothesized that bronchus-to-spine (Br-Spine) measurement could help in evaluating heart enlargement and measuring the distance between Radiographic Left Atrial Dimension (RLAD) endpoint and the neighbouring vertebrae (RLAD-Spine) could help in evaluating the presence of left atrial enlargement (LAE)

  • Dogs were assigned to one of two groups according to the absence (Group A) or presence (Group B) of LAE defined as La/Left atrium-to-aorta ratio (Ao) ratio > 1.6 [4, 6, 8]

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Summary

Introduction

Radiography is useful to determine left atrial (LA) size when echocardiography is not available. The objective of this study was to assess the clinical usefulness of 2 new radiographic measurements to detect and quantify left atrial enlargement (LAE) compared to RLAD and using left atrium to aortic root (LA/Ao) ratio as gold standard. These new measurements, bronchus-to-spine (Br-Spine) and RLAD-to-spine (RLAD-Spine) may be more precise in cases were LA boundaries are not well defined. Identifying the exact location of the LA roof, which is needed for RLAD, is straightforward in cases with moderate to severe LAE It is difficult in some normal dogs as left and right main stem bronchi, main pulmonary veins and the bronchial and vascular trees. The objective of the study was to test the clinical value of these two radiographic measurements in cases with LAE using LA/ Ao ratio as a reference

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