
THE TOP TEN QUESTIONS
ABOUT HOLTER MONITORING FOR BOXERS
by Martha Bowman
-
Isn’t it
terribly inconvenient?
-
What exactly
does the test entail?
-
Won’t the
shaving ruin my dog’s chances in the show ring?
-
The test may
not tell me definitively whether my dog has cardiomyopathy.
Why use a test that can't even give me the information I
need?
-
I already
ECG and Echo my dogs every year; isn’t that enough?
-
I keep
hearing that it costs hundreds of dollars per test; how
can I afford that?
-
Is it really
necessary? My own veterinarian said it isn’t.
-
My dogs come
from a long-lived line; do I really need to test them?
-
My vet has
never done a Holter, and there is no cardiologist in my
area, so who is going to test my dogs?
-
What if I
Holter my dog and I get bad news?
1. Isn’t it
terribly inconvenient?
Right now it
is true that you can’t just run down to your regular vet and
get a Holter monitor test done right when you want it.
However, with a little planning, Holtering your dogs doesn’t
have to be an ordeal. Once you get the monitor and
familiarize yourself with its use, you can test one dog each
day until all your dogs are done; you can do the monitor
hook-ups in your own home, at a time that is most convenient
for you, so you don’t have to deal with the inconvenience of
working around your vet’s schedule, or traveling to a
cardiologist’s clinic. Once all your dogs have been tested,
you won’t have to test again for at least another year.
Possibly the
greatest inconvenience at this time is that there are far
more breeders wanting to Holter their dogs than there are
monitors available for use. This has resulted in long
waiting periods for access to a monitor. Fortunately, this
is a surmountable problem! Many clubs have expressed
interest in purchasing a Holter monitor. If individuals
using the monitor are charged just a nominal cost, the club
can easily pay for the materials each user needs and the
maintenance of the monitor, while still saving enough to
ensure that the club will be able to purchase a new monitor
when it is needed. If Boxer fanciers want to ensure that
Holtering is available for routine screening, however, it is
we who must take the initiative to see that more monitors
are purchased and made available for use by breeders and
owners!
2. What
exactly does the test entail?
There are
currently a few clubs, veterinarians, and other individuals
who will rent the Holter monitor to an owner, generally for
a nominal fee. The monitor will arrive at your home with a
complete set of instructions. All the owner needs to do is
shave a few patches on the dog’s torso, stick on some
disposable self-adhesive electrodes (included with the
monitor), and snap a few color-coded lead wires on to the
electrodes in the order the instructions specify. A regular
cassette tape (usually included with the monitor rental fee)
goes into the monitor, which is similar to a Sony Walkman.
Once the battery (usually also enclosed) is inserted, the
test begins. Then all that remains is to wrap some Elastikon
or VetRap around the dog to hold the leads and the monitor
in place, and keep the dog confined (away from other dogs)
and/or supervised for the 24-hour duration of the test.
Removing the monitor is as simple as removing its battery
and cassette tape, and taking the tape and electrodes off
the dog. There are several cardiologists who will provide
tape reading for a small fee; the hardest part is waiting to
hear the results of the test!
3. Won’t the
shaving ruin my dog’s chances in the show ring?
Most owners
actually find that the shaved patches grow back fairly
quickly. Within a month or so, they may be almost invisible
(of course this depends on your own dog’s rate of hair
growth). Even the most actively-campaigned dogs have breaks
in their schedules, so if you can arrange to Holter your dog
at the beginning of a rest period he may have a full coat by
the time you are ready to show him again. Some Boxers have
enjoyed success in the show ring even while sporting shaved
patches from the Holter test. Judges will often simply ask
the handler the reason for the shaved areas, and seem
pleased to find that they are evidence of good breed
stewardship by the concerned owner.
4. The test
may not tell me definitively whether my dog has
cardiomyopathy. Why use a test that can't even give me the
information I need?
It’s
very true that even a Holter with 0 abnormal beats IS NOT
known to mean your dog will never develop cardiomyopathy.
However, there are several compelling reasons why you should
still consider Holtering your dogs.
First, several
cardiologists who have studied Boxer cardiomyopathy feel
that this test is our current best option for identifying
dogs with the disease. If you test a dog and it DOES show a
large number of abnormal beats (even if you have not
actually observed overt symptoms of BCM) then a cardiologist
may conclude that the dog is affected by the disease.
Remember, the first "symptom" often observed to identify an
affected Boxer is its sudden and unexpected death! By
screening your dogs regularly (annually for stud dogs, and
prior to each breeding for bitches) you increase the
likelihood that you will identify affected dogs in time to
reduce their impact on your breeding program, and on the
breed as a whole. While an imperfect test may not seem
worthwhile, similar testing methods have worked well to help
reduce the incidence of health problems in other breeds. For
example, in such breeds as the Labrador Retriever, the
Collie breeds, and the Cardigan Welsh Corgi, the incidence
of progressive retinal atrophy (PRA) has been reduced by
breeders’ voluntary, annual CERF certification of breeding
animals.
A second
good reason to Holter is that breeders, and the data they
can provide, are a valuable resource in the effort to learn
more about BCM. We do not know enough about the ways BCM
differs from cardiomyopathy in other breeds. We know very
little about the way the disease progresses through the
lifetime of an affected dog. We do not understand the mode
of inheritance of the disease. We do not know which
treatments are most effective. All Boxer breeders would like
to have a better understanding of these questions, but
researchers cannot get the data they need to address our
concerns unless breeders are willing to do their part and
volunteer their dogs as research participants.
A third
reason to Holter is that the identification of living, BCM-affected
dogs is vital to the development of a genetic marker test
for the disease. Once affected and unaffected dogs are
identified, researchers can search for DNA regions that are
found only in the affected dogs. In the Cardigan Welsh
Corgi, for example, a genetic marker test for PRA was very
recently developed using this technology. Now, breeders can
simply obtain blood or tissue samples from very young
puppies, and at minimal cost can determine whether a dog
will ever develop the disease. The imperfect test (CERF
certification) was critical in the identification of
affected animals, and in the development of the accurate
early-detection system now available to all CWC breeders. It
is hoped that researchers will someday be able to develop a
genetic marker test for BCM, but this is going to require a
great deal of breeder participation. If more Boxer breeders
Holter their dogs, and volunteer their affected AND
unaffected dogs for genetic studies (as simple as providing
a small blood sample and a confidential pedigree), this will
facilitate the development of a sophisticated test, which
could make the complete elimination of BCM a possibility for
the future of the breed!
A final
compelling reason to Holter is that more and more breeders
and puppy buyers are actively seeking Boxers from Holtered
stock. Boxer fanciers who have experienced the heartbreaking
loss of a young Boxer to BCM are especially enthusiastic to
locate breeders who are using the most sensitive test
available to screen for this disease.
5. I
already ECG and Echo my dogs every year; isn’t that enough?
The
echocardiogram examines the heart for structural and flow
abnormalities, while cardiomyopathy in Boxers is a disorder
of the electrical conduction mechanisms in the heart muscle.
An echocardiogram, performed after the age of one year, CAN
rule out sub-aortic stenosis (another serious heart ailment
which can affect Boxers), so it is important to perform this
test. However, many Boxers that have cardiomyopathy show no
abnormal signs at all on echocardiogram, so the
echocardiogram is not an acceptable test for cardiomyopathy.
Many
people still use routine ECGs to test for electrical
conduction abnormalities of the Boxer heart. However,
because the ECGs routinely used for screening are so brief
(5-10 minutes), and because the arrhythmias seen in affected
Boxers tend to be clustered in "runs," it is very easy for
an affected Boxer to score a perfectly clear ECG. By
extending the testing period to 24 hours, the Holter monitor
captures a much more complete picture of the electrical
activity of your Boxer’s heart, and obviously has a much
higher likelihood of successfully identifying dogs that
exhibit abnormalities. Before Holter testing was widely
available, a routine ECG was the best test available for the
identification of Boxers with cardiac conduction disorders.
Now that more and more "ECG Clear" Boxers are being Holtered,
we can see that the routine ECG is a far inferior test, and
that it fails to identify many affected dogs.
6. I keep
hearing that the Holter costs hundreds of dollars per test;
I am dedicated to the health of the breed, but how can I
afford such expensive tests?
The cost
of renting a monitor is generally around $20 per dog, plus
an additional one-time shipping fee (regardless of how many
dogs you test while you have the monitor). If you have your
vet attach the monitor to the dog (and draw a blood sample)
there may be a nominal office visit fee. If you explain that
you are participating in a research study, many vets will
perform these services at reduced cost, and some will waive
their fee entirely. Many breeders find the process so
straightforward that they simply attach the monitor to their
own dog, following the instructions provided. Once the test
is complete, the analysis of the Holter tape may be
available for no cost, or for a small fee. Many breeders who
have begun using the Holter monitor report that it costs
them no more than what they had been spending on annual ECGs.
The cost of the test (in both money and time) may be
completely offset by foregoing just a single show each year.
7. Is
Holter testing really necessary? My own veterinarian said it
isn’t.
Your
general veterinarian is not as familiar with Boxer
cardiomyopathy as the cardiologists who have recommended the
use of the Holter as a screening test. The veterinarians who
do advocate use of the Holter monitor are cardiology
specialists, many of whom have dedicated years of research
to the study of Boxer cardiomyopathy. You can refer your
veterinarian to one of these specialists for more
information.
8. My
dogs come from a long-lived line; do I really need to test
them?
While
longevity is a good thing to have in a pedigree, it is no
guarantee. The mechanism of inheritance of cardiomyopathy is
not currently understood, although it is clear that the
disease has a hereditary component. Many genetic disorders
can skip one or several generations before being manifested
again. Boxers that have cardiomyopathy are often as active,
outgoing, and boisterous as their unaffected peers, and
often the first "symptom" of the disease is the sudden death
of a dog that had appeared to be perfectly healthy. These
sudden deaths are frequently attributed to heat stroke, bee
stings, poisoning, or other such accidental causes. You may
have an affected dog in your pedigree and simply not know it
due to misdiagnosis of the dog’s cause of death. Even if
your foundation were unaffected, any outcross you have ever
performed may have introduced the genes that are associated
with cardiomyopathy. If your dogs are truly free of
cardiomyopathy, then Holtering them regularly throughout
their lifetimes will simply help to demonstrate this fact.
These dogs could also be very valuable as participants in
studies designed to identify the genetic markers of the
disease!
9. My vet
has never done a Holter, and there is no cardiologist in my
area, so who is going to test my dogs?
The vast
majority of veterinarians in general practice have never
performed this test, but the instructions that are provided
with the monitor are very straightforward and explicit. For
some models of Holter monitors, helpful websites are
available which provide written descriptions of the
procedure, with photographs to illustrate each step. There
may be a breeder in your area who has experience with the
Holter test. These folks can be a great help when you are
using the monitor for the first time. However, many novice
Holter testers have successfully managed to set up tests in
their own homes, with only the written instructions to help
them. Once you have walked through the procedure with the
first dog, you will find that it goes much more quickly, and
seems much simpler, as you repeat the test on your other
dogs.
10. What
if I Holter my dog and I get bad news?
This is
perhaps the most common reason so many people still choose
not to Holter their Boxers. It is natural to fear that you
may learn that a promising youngster, a top-producing stud
dog, or a foundation bitch, has cardiomyopathy. If you are
truly breeding for the improvement of the Boxer breed, then
the information you can gain by regular Holtering is
information you absolutely need to make informed breeding
decisions. The real question you should be asking yourself
is, "What if I am producing Boxers with cardiomyopathy, and
I don’t realize it yet?" Surely, both for your own
reputation and for the future of the breed, it is better to
go into any breeding venture with your eyes wide open. Most
breeders do want to know the truth about their dogs’ health
status before they breed, and while the Holter test is not
perfect, it is the best method currently available for the
early detection of cardiomyopathy in the Boxer. It is
terribly devastating when a cherished Boxer dies
prematurely. When you Holter your Boxers regularly, you are
doing what you can to ensure that the puppies your studs and
bitches produce will live long and healthy lives. |