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		Acquired Heart Disease
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																		Dog Breed Predilictions
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																		Myxomatous Mitral Valve Degeneration5 Topics
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																		Cardiomyopathies
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																		Canine Dilated Cardiomyopathy5 Topics
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																		Feline Dilated Cardiomyopathy5 Topics
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																		Feline Thromboembolic Disease
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																		Feline Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy5 Topics
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																		Feline Restrictive Cardiomyopathy
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																		Other Feline Cardiomyopathies
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																		Feline Hyperthyroidism5 Topics
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																		Boxer Cardiomyopathy
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																		Canine Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
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																		Pericardial Disorders
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																		Pericardial Effusion6 Topics
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																		Constrictive Pericardial Disease
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																		Feline Pericardial Disease
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																		Bacterial Endocarditis5 Topics
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																		Canine Heartworm Disease6 Topics
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																		Feline Heartworm Disease
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																		Occult Heartworm Disease5 Topics
									
										Lesson 7,
										Topic 2									
								
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				a) Signalment:
- Middle aged cats, at times young adults may present
- Males may be more frequently affected than females
- Persians, Maine Coons and Ragdolls may be predisposed
b) History:
- Sudden development of dyspnea
- Anorexia
- Lethargy/weakness
- Syncope
- Limb paralysis if thromboembolic disease occurs
- Sudden death may occur (and may be the first sign of disease)
- Free of clinical signs; discovered in cats free of clinical signs when a heart murmur or gallop detected on physical examination was pursued
c) Physical Examination:
- Signs of congestive heart failure as outlined in of Clinical Evaluation of Heart Disease section
- Abdominal effusion is rare; pleural effusion is common
- Dysrhythmias, pulse deficits
- If thromboembolic disease occurs- Paralysis of the affected limb – usually a hindlimb
- The muscle is hard, painful and cool
- There is a weak or absent arterial pulse in the limb
- A shortly clipped toe nail in the affected limb may fail to bleed
- May be the first and only presenting sign of underlying cardiomyopathy of any type
 
- Gallop cardiac rhythms are frequent
- A systolic heart murmur of mitral insufficiency and/or left ventricular outflow obstruction may be present
- Note that the absence of a murmur or a gallop does not rule out the presence of HCM. In a recent study, 22% of cats with HCM had neither a murmur nor a gallop on physical examination.

