Basic feasibility studies on interventional cardiology in horses
Absztrakt
In horses, both physiological and pathological cardiac arrhythmias occur. Pathological
cardiac arrhythmias can develop primarily as conductive disorders or secondarily as a
result of changes in the structure of the heart, metabolic and endocrine disorders, systemic
inflammation, low blood pressure, bleeding, anaemia, ischaemia, toxicosis, and various
drug effects. The examination of arrhythmias is particularly important due to the
haemodynamic changes that result from them (reduced blood pressure, decreased flow
or perfusion) and the development of electrical instability (fibrillation, sudden cardiac
death).
The cardiac rhythm of horses has been studied using electrocardiography (ECG) since
the 1910s. The first electrocardiogram obtained from a horse was published in 1913. From
the 1960s, with the aid of radiotelemetry devices, it became possible to record
electrocardiograms from horses during exercise and, by the 1980s, extensive knowledge
was available regarding the physiological and pathological rhythm disorders in horses.
Besides pharmacological and transvenous electrical cardioversion (TVEC), interventional
methods have been developed in horses lately. There are a lot of technical issues that
cause difficulties in the adaptation of human interventional methods in horses. The main
differences are the larger size of the equine thorax and heart and the dissimilarities in the
electrical properties of the conduction system in the heart.