The Free Press Journal

Dogs suffer from heart diseases too

... Especially the ones born in summer

-

Owing to higher level of outdoor air pollution during summers, dogs born during this time are more likely to be at higher risk of heart disease, according to a study. For both dogs and humans, outside air pollution during pregnancy and at the time of birth appears to play a role in later developmen­t of heart disease.

Overall, dogs have a 0.3 to 2 per cent risk of developing heart disease depending on breed, but among those that are geneticall­y predispose­d to the heart disease, the birth month difference in risk was found to be marginal.

However, breeds not geneticall­y predispose­d to the disease, such as Norfolk terrier, Berger Picard, American Staffordsh­ire terrier, English toy spaniel, Bouvier des flandres, Border terrier and Havanese were also found to be at highest risk. This suggests that the effect supports an environmen­tal

mechanism, the researcher­s said, in a paper published in the journal Scientific Reports.

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, also supports earlier findings in humans pointing to the role of early gestationa­l exposure to fine air particulat­es and increased risk of heart disease later in life.

“It’s important to study dogs because the canine heart is a remarkably similar model to the human cardiovasc­ular system,” said Mary Regina Boland, Assistant Professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in the US.

“Also, humans and dogs share their lives together and are exposed to similar environmen­tal effects, so seeing this birth season-cardiovasc­ular

disease relationsh­ip in both species illuminate­s mechanisms behind this birth-season disease relationsh­ip,” Boland added.

Because dogs’ pregnancie­s are shorter than humans (lasting only 2 months), pollution as a possible mechanism is still thought to be through the mother’s inhalation of air pollution effecting the uterine environmen­t, which in turn affects the developing cardiovasc­ular system of the baby or puppy, the study showed.

The research team found that risk climbs to the greatest level in dogs born in July, who have a 74 per cent greater risk of heart disease than would typically be expected.

 ?? PIC: FUNNYJUNK.COM ??
PIC: FUNNYJUNK.COM

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India