A repeatable CT protocol for quantifying caudal vena cava growth in medium and large breed dogs

Vet Radiol Ultrasound. 2023 Jul;64(4):632-639. doi: 10.1111/vru.13237. Epub 2023 Apr 2.

Abstract

Developmental malformations can cause stunted or abnormal growth and clinical disease in dogs. In humans, measurements of the inferior vena cava are used as methods for detecting abnormal growth trajectories. The objectives of this retrospective, multicenter, analytical, cross-sectional study were to develop a repeatable protocol to measure the caudal vena cava (CVC) and generate growth curves in medium and large-breed dogs during development. Contrast-enhanced CT DICOM images from 438 normal dogs, aged from 1 to 18 months, from five specific breeds were included. A "best guess" measurement protocol was created. Dogs were stratified into medium or large breed groups based on growth rate trajectories. Linear regression models and logarithmic trend lines were used to evaluate the CVC growth over time. The CVC measurements were analyzed from four anatomical regions: thorax, diaphragm, intra-hepatic, and renal. The thoracic segment produced the most repeatable measurements with the highest explanatory power. The CVC thoracic circumference ranged from 2.5 to 4.9 cm from 1 to 18 months of age. Medium and large breeds had similar CVC growth trajectories, with comparable estimated marginal means, however medium dogs reached 80% of predicted final CVC size approximately 4 weeks earlier than large breed dogs. This new protocol provides a standardized technique for evaluation of the CVC circumference over time using contrast-enhanced CT and is most repeatable when taken at the thoracic level. This approach could be adapted for other vessels to predict their growth trajectories, generating healthy reference population data for comparison against patients with vascular anomalies.

Keywords: canine; computed tomography; vessel development.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Dogs
  • Humans
  • Multicenter Studies as Topic / veterinary
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Tomography, X-Ray Computed / veterinary
  • Vascular Diseases* / veterinary
  • Vena Cava, Inferior* / abnormalities
  • Vena Cava, Inferior* / diagnostic imaging