Estimated reading time: 3.85 minutes
A concerning trend is emerging in some small animal practices: after experiencing an unexpected anesthetic death in a breed like a British Shorthair, Ragdoll, or Maine Coon, the understandable reaction is to simply stop offering surgery for these cats. While this approach eliminates the immediate risk, it also prevents these pets from receiving essential care.
The underlying issue is often undiagnosed subclinical heart disease, specifically Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM). HCM is a silent threat; a cat can have significant structural disease and still present as completely normal on physical exam. The stress of anesthesia can unmask this condition, leading to tragic outcomes.
The solution is not to avoid surgery but to adopt a more robust, evidence-based pre-anesthetic screening protocol. Combining an AI-powered ECG (like CardioBird) with a blood-based biomarker (NT-proBNP) creates a powerful, efficient, and highly effective safety net for your feline patients.
The Two-Pillar Screening Approach: ECG and NT-proBNP
These two tests are complementary because they assess the heart in two different but crucial ways: electrical function and structural stress.
Why They Are the Perfect Screening Combo
Using either test alone has limitations. Used together, they create a comprehensive picture.
By using both, you cover both bases:
Your Practical Pre-Anesthetic Protocol for High-Risk Breeds
Integrating this duo into your clinic’s workflow is straightforward:
A Proactive Standard of Care
Adopting the ECG + NT-proBNP combo moves your practice from a reactive stance (stopping services after a negative event) to a proactive approach. This efficient, evidence-based protocol significantly reduces unforeseen anesthetic risks, enhances patient safety, builds client trust, and allows you to provide care for all breeds with greater confidence.
Ready to implement this protocol? Your CardioBird platform is the perfect starting point. Combine it with an NT-proBNP test for a complete pre-anesthetic cardiac picture.
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