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The Anatomical Substrate for Sick Sinus Syndrome in Dogs

Noboru Machida, Atsushi HIRAKAWA

2021Journal of Comparative Pathology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The hearts of 28 dogs, clinically diagnosed as having symptomatic sick sinus syndrome (SSS), were examined post mortem, with a particular focus on the sinus node (SN) region. The affected dogs were divided into two groups according to the findings of ambulatory electrocardiography: 16 dogs with severe sinoatrial (SA) block and/or sinus arrest (group A) and 12 dogs with long sinus or atrial pauses due to SA block and/or sinus arrest accompanied by atrial tachyarrhythmias (group B). The most significant histopathological changes found in both SSS groups were extensive destruction of the SN characterized by depletion of nodal cells with fatty or fibrofatty replacement and interruption of contiguity between the SN and the surrounding atrial myocardium. Furthermore, in group B, the SN lesions were combined with fibrosis of the atrial myocardium. The results of this investigation improve our understanding of the close relationship between the electrocardiogram findings and pathological alterations in each group. Because most human cases of SSS are due to degenerative fibrosis of the SN, the loss and disappearance of nodal cells with a corresponding increase in fatty or fibrofatty tissue, may be specific to canine cases of SSS.

Topics & Concepts

SSS*Sick sinus syndromeSinus (botany)MedicineFibrosisInternal medicinePathologicalCardiologySinoatrial nodeElectrocardiographySinus rhythmPathologyAtrial fibrillationHeart rateBiologyBlood pressureGenusBotanyCardiac Arrhythmias and TreatmentsCardiovascular Syncope and Autonomic DisordersRespiratory and Cough-Related Research
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