Abstract

BackgroundVipera berus has a worldwide distribution and causes high morbidity in dogs annually. A complication to envenomation may be cardiac arrhythmias. The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence, types, and timing of arrhythmias, using 24-h ambulatory electrocardiography (24-AECG), in dogs bitten by V. berus in the first 24–32 h after envenomation. In addition, this study aimed to investigate if there were differences in selected clinical and hematological- and biochemical variables (including cardiac troponin I) at admission between V. berus-envenomed dogs with and without detected pathologic arrhythmias. Seventeen prospectively recruited client-owned dogs acutely envenomed by V. berus, were therefore examined clinically and echocardiographically, sampled for blood, hospitalized, and monitored by 24-AECG.ResultsClinically significant pathologic arrhythmias in this study were of ventricular origin, such as frequent single ventricular premature contractions (VPCs) and couplets of VPCs, episodes of ventricular tachycardia and idioventricular rhythm, and “R-on-T phenomenon”. Variations of these arrhythmias were detected by 24-AECG in eight (47%) of included dogs. No arrhythmias were detected by cardiac auscultation. Twenty-four hours following envenomation, four out of eight dogs experienced decreases (all P < 0.039), and three out of eight dogs experienced increases (all P < 0.034), in arrhythmic episodes. All four dogs bitten on a limb developed pathologic arrhythmias. Otherwise, no significant differences in clinical, hematological or biochemical variables were seen between dogs with pathologic arrhythmias and those without.ConclusionForty-seven percent of dogs bitten by V. berus included in this study experienced pathologic arrhythmias of abnormal ventricular depolarization. During the first 24–32 h from the snakebite, some dogs experienced a decrease in arrhythmic episodes and others an increase in arrhythmic episodes. These findings indicate a potential value of repeated or prolonged electrocardiography monitoring of envenomed dogs for identification of which dogs that might benefit the most from prolonged hospitalization for optimal monitoring and treatment of cardiac abnormalities. In the present study, dogs that developed arrhythmias could not be differentiated from dogs that did not based on clinical findings or hematological or biochemical variables obtained at admission.

Highlights

  • Vipera berus has a worldwide distribution and causes high morbidity in dogs annually

  • Significant arrhythmias were of ventricular origin, and in the 24-h ambulatory electrocardiography (24-AECG) recordings, pathologic arrhythmias were found in eight of the 17 (47%) included dogs

  • Clinically significant arrhythmias were of ventricular origin, whereas other studies of viper envenomation report of sinus tachycardia, atrial premature complex (APC), ST-depression, and sinus arrest [9, 12]

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Summary

Introduction

Vipera berus has a worldwide distribution and causes high morbidity in dogs annually. The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence, types, and timing of arrhythmias, using 24-h ambulatory electrocardiography (24-AECG), in dogs bitten by V. berus in the first 24–32 h after envenomation. This study aimed to investigate if there were differences in selected clinical and hematological- and biochemical variables (including cardiac troponin I) at admission between V. berus-envenomed dogs with and without detected pathologic arrhythmias. Few studies have investigated arrhythmias secondary to V. berus and Vipera palaestinae envenomation [9, 10, 12]. In a prospective study of 24 dogs bitten by V. berus examined by standard (short-time) ECG, six dogs presented with arrhythmias at the initial clinical examination and ten dogs had arrhythmias 12–24 h after admission [10]

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