Liz Buchanan BVSc MRCVS
Keymaster
Heart murmurs can simply come about from pressing the stephoscope too hard against the chest, but your vet will by now have reduced the pressure and listened again, and in several places, to rule this out. Other causes are more serious and include structural diseases which have often been present since birth, such as holes in the heart, abnormally sized chambers, incompletely formed heart-valves and so on. These can lead to secondary problems as animals get bigger and older. Other heart murmurs are acquired ie develop later, such as leaky valves (which in turn cause backflow and impact the mechanism of the heartbeat), and thickening heart muscle. Some murmurs are secondary to other things going on in the body, such as fever, anaemia and hyperthyroidism.
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