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Cat Heart Murmur

Heart Murmurs

A heart murmur indicates that blood is leaking from one of the heart's valves. This heart valve problem is common in older cats.

The average cat's heart, weighing less than one-tenth of an ounce, will beat more than 350 million times during a 13-year lifetime. The heart has four chambers with valves that regulate blood flow. The major veins bringing blood to the heart are called the vena cavas. Blood first enters the heart's right atrium, then passes through the tricuspid valve and flows into the right ventricle. The right ventricle contracts and sends blood into the pulmonic artery through the pulmonic valve. Blood then goes to the lungs where it becomes oxygenated. Oxygenated blood from the pulmonic vein enters the heart's left atrium, then passes into the left ventricle via the mitral valve. When the left ventricle contracts, blood shoots out of the heart through the aorta and circulates throughout the rest of the body.

The tricuspid and mitral valves regulate blood flow through the heart. In cats, deformities of these valves are the most common congenital cardiac malformations. A murmur, or squishing noise, indicates blood is leaking out of the valves during heart contraction. Instead of forming a tight seal, blood escapes around the valve. By listening to the heart with a stethoscope, vets can often detect valve problems. A murmur's intensity and volume does not correlate with the severity of valve damage.

Murmurs are common in older cats. Some kittens are born with murmurs and outgrow them; others have murmurs their entire lives without problems. Though uncommon in cats, some murmurs may progress and lead to congestive heart failure.

Posted: Tue Jun 24 00:00:00 PDT 2003

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Wish you could provide more current information. If it exists. Medical information seems to progress in all areas within a year or two.
margarte, Goodyear, AZ
Posted: 4/3/2009 1:26:31 PM
Thanks for the info. What I can't understand is how my cat, who passed her physical in March of this year, was discovered to have a hert murmur the very next month, when she went in for dental work. So how could that heart murmu have developed in less than 30 days???

(FYI- 3 different vets heard that murmur)
Ace, Arlington, VA
Posted: 4/21/2008 12:35:57 PM
I have just read your article on Heart Murmurs and I am glad that you included that cats can lead a normal life with a murmur. Six weeks ago we lost our little buddy "Simon", who was born with a heart murmur. A Grade 1 at two months of age, when we adopted him, and a grade 4 at his last check-up. His murmur never kept him from being anything but a joy. He loved to be petted and played with and his favorite bed was anywhere "Mommy and Daddy" were. He played like a kitten, with his favorite toy, a Q-tip, even just hours before he died in his sleep. Simon was 10 years old and you would never know he had a heart problem. Only three weeks ago, we adopted another cat from a local shelter and it was discovered at her first Vet appointment that "Twinkie" too has a murmur, a Grade 3. "Twinkie" is 3 years old and we plan to be a family for whatever time she has on this earth. I can only hope, that "Twinkie" lives as long as my little buddy "Simon" did. God willing!
Deborah Anderson, Oswego, IL
Posted: 2/17/2007 9:51:51 AM
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