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Aortic Stenosis

 


Aortic (subaortic) stenosis is a narrowing of the pathway for blood leaving the heart. The narrowing is usually beneath the aortic valve of the left ventricle; the condition is then called subvalvular aortic stenosis or SAS for short.

SAS is a genetically predetermined disease that affects dogs. The condition is rare in cats.

A number of breeds are predisposed, including golden retrievers, Newfoundland's, boxers, German shepherds, Rottweilers, Sharpei, bull terriers, English bulldogs and Bouvier de Flanders.

The mode of inheritance (genetic causes) is not simple and healthy carriers of the disease genes are common.

Mild cases of SAS have little impact on the pet other than causing a heart murmur and rendering the dog unsuitable for breeding. Moderate to severe cases are at risk for exercise intolerance, fainting, heart failure, irregular heart rhythms, infections on the heart valve and sudden death.


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