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Feline Congestive Heart Failure and Coagulation

Principle Investigator

Teresa DeFrancesco

Description

Cats with congestive heart failure (abnormal fluid accumulation) are at high risk for developing blood clots but the risk appears to differ with the manifestation of heart failure. There are two different manifestations of congestive heart failure in cats: 1) primarily pulmonary edema, and 2) primarily pleural effusion.

Pulmonary edema is where fluid accumulates within the lung tissue itself, and pleural effusion is where fluid
accumulates around the lungs contained within the chest cavity. This study will be comparing cats with cardiomyopathy in heart failure with pleural effusion and pulmonary edema.

Testing Requirements

All cats with suspected or confirmed active congestive heart failure who are presented to the North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine Veterinary Hospital will be considered for enrollment. They will receive further diagnostics and treatments, including physical exam, blood pressure, bloodwork, focused chest ultrasound, chest radiographs, and echocardiogram to aid in a definitive diagnosis of congestive heart failure.

Enrollment Start

03/18/2024

Enrollment Finish

05/01/2027

Eligibility

All cats with suspected or confirmed active congestive heart failure

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Contact

Please contact Vanessa Roman: VROMAN@NCSU.EDU