Feline Echo Measurement Guide

Feline Heart Screening Guide

Feline EchoMeasurement Guide

A plain language guide to the common terms and measurements found on a cat echocardiogram report.

NovaBear feline echocardiogram report used as a plain language measurement guide example

Echo Shows Structure

It helps evaluate heart walls, chambers, and blood flow.

Numbers Need Context

No single value should be interpreted by itself.

Conclusion Matters

The cardiologist’s final review is the key result.

How to Use This Guide

This page is educational. It can help families read common echo terms, but it does not replace a veterinary cardiologist’s interpretation.

Echo reports may use different formats and abbreviations. The final meaning depends on the full exam, the cat’s age, body size, blood pressure, health status, and the cardiologist’s review.

Feline HCM: Key Measurements

A simple visual guide to the main echocardiographic measurements used when screening cats for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

1. Heart Anatomy

An illustrated cross-section of a feline heart showing the chambers, valves, aorta, and ventricular wall
  • Aorta
  • Left atrium (LA)
  • Mitral valve
  • Interventricular septum (IVS)
  • Left ventricle (LV)
  • Left ventricular free wall (LVFW)

2. Long Axis Measurements

Long axis feline heart view with IVSd, LVIDd, LVFWd, LA, and Ao measurement markers
IVSd
=
Interventricular septal thickness in diastole
LVIDd
=
Left ventricular internal diameter in diastole
LVFWd
=
Left ventricular free wall thickness in diastole
LA
=
Left atrium
Ao
=
Aorta

3. Short Axis Measurements

Short axis feline heart view with IVSd, LVIDd, and LVFWd measurement markers
IVSd
=
Interventricular septal thickness in diastole
LVIDd
=
Left ventricular internal diameter in diastole
LVFWd
=
Left ventricular free wall thickness in diastole

4. What Veterinarians Look For

Measurement What it helps assess
IVSd and LVFWd Wall thickening
LVIDd Chamber size
LA and LA:Ao Left atrial enlargement
Overall pattern Whether the heart shows changes consistent with HCM

What Cardiologists Review Together

A feline echocardiogram is not a simple pass or fail number. The full pattern matters.

Wall Thickness

Septal and ventricularwall values are reviewedwith the full heart image.

Chamber Size

The left atrium and leftventricle are checked forsize and shape changes.

Blood Flow

Doppler can help showflow direction, turbulence,or possible obstruction.

Clinical Context

Blood pressure, thyroidstatus, age, and examfindings all matter.

Common Terms on BearMary Reports

These phrases help families understand the difference between recorded measurements and the cardiologist’s final interpretation.

How to Read NovaBear’s HCM Screening Report

Annotated page 1. Key measurements and what is generally reassuring or worth interpreting with the full echocardiogram.

NovaBear hypertrophic feline cardiomyopathy screening report page 1 with highlighted ECG rhythm, wall thickness, chamber dimensions, left atrial size, and follow-up threshold section.

1ECG and rhythm

  • Heart rate: 230 bpm
  • Rhythm: regular

A regular rhythm is reassuring. Heart rate can be elevated during an exam because cats are often stressed, so it should be interpreted in clinical context.

Rhythm reassuring

2LVPWd, left ventricular free wall thickness

  • 3.4 mm, 2D
  • 3.64 mm, M mode

This measures the thickness of the left ventricular wall. In HCM, this wall becomes abnormally thick.

Typical reassuring range: about 3.0 to 5.0 mm
Borderline: 5.0 to 5.5 mm
Concerning: > 5.5 mm
Within normal range

3IVSd, interventricular septal thickness

  • 3.5 mm, 2D
  • 3.96 mm, M mode

This measures the thickness of the septum between the ventricles. Thickening here is a key sign looked for in HCM screening.

Typical reassuring range: about 3.0 to 5.0 mm
Borderline: 5.0 to 5.5 mm
Concerning: > 5.5 mm
Within normal range

4Left atrial size

  • LA: 11.7 mm

Left atrial size helps show whether the left atrium is enlarged. The value shown here is presented as reassuring on this page and is not used alone to diagnose HCM.

Within normal range

5Chamber dimensions

  • LVIDd: 13.04 mm
  • LVIDs: 8.02 mm

These describe chamber size when the heart is relaxed and when it is contracting. The values shown here are presented as reassuring on this page and are not used alone to diagnose HCM.

Within normal range

6Why section 3 matters

This follow-up section is mainly used when wall thickness is above 5.5 mm. NovaBear’s wall thickness values are below that threshold, so this section is not triggered by the values shown here.

Threshold not triggered

Normal Echocardiogram

The overall ultrasound review did not identify abnormal heart findings on that exam.

No Evidence of HCM

No evidence of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was noted at the time of screening.

Measurements

The recorded values support the cardiologist’s interpretation but are not read alone.

Recheck in One Year

A repeat echocardiogram is recommended to continue monitoring over time.

What a Clean Result Means

We use the word clean carefully. It describes the most recent screening result, not a lifetime promise.

Clean on This Exam

No evidence of HCM was reported on the latest echocardiogram.

Monitoring Continues

Repeat screening helps follow heart health as cats mature.

Not a Guarantee

A clean result today does not rule out changes later in life.

Core Echo Measurements

These are common terms families may see on feline heart ultrasound reports. The plain meanings below are simplified for general understanding.

Term Plain Meaning Why It Matters
IVSd Interventricular septum thickness in diastole. Helps assess whether the wall between the ventricles is thickened.
LVPWd Left ventricular posterior wall thickness in diastole. Reviewed with other wall measurements when screening for thickened heart muscle.
LVFWd Left ventricular free wall thickness in diastole. Another wall thickness value used to understand the left ventricle.
LVIDd Left ventricular internal diameter in diastole. Describes the chamber size when the ventricle is filling.
LA Left atrial size. Left atrial enlargement can be important when judging disease progression.
Ao Aortic root size. Often used as a reference when comparing left atrial size.
LA to Ao Ratio between the left atrium and the aorta. Helps evaluate whether the left atrium is enlarged.
FS Fractional shortening. Gives information about how the left ventricle changes size during contraction.
HR Heart rate during the exam. Helps the cardiologist interpret the exam conditions and heart function.
Doppler Ultrasound assessment of blood flow. Can help identify abnormal flow patterns or obstruction.

IVSd

Septum Thickness

Helps assess whether the wall between the ventricles is thickened.

LVPWd

Posterior Wall

Reviewed with other wall measurements when screening for thickened heart muscle.

LVFWd

Free Wall

Another wall thickness value used to understand the left ventricle.

LVIDd

Chamber Size

Describes the chamber size when the ventricle is filling.

LA

Left Atrium

Left atrial enlargement can be important when judging disease progression.

Ao

Aortic Root

Often used as a reference when comparing left atrial size.

LA to Ao

Size Ratio

Helps evaluate whether the left atrium is enlarged.

FS

Contraction Change

Gives information about how the left ventricle changes size during contraction.

HR

Heart Rate

Helps the cardiologist interpret exam conditions and heart function.

Doppler

Blood Flow

Can help identify abnormal flow patterns or obstruction.

Frequently Asked Questions

Short answers to common questions families may have after viewing an HCM report.

Can I diagnose HCM from one number?

No. Echo measurements need to be interpreted together with the full ultrasound image, the cat’s health status, and the cardiologist’s conclusion.

Does clean mean the cat will never develop HCM?

No. A clean result means there was no evidence of HCM on that specific exam. Ongoing monitoring is still important.

Why does the report recommend recheck in one year?

Some heart conditions can develop over time. A planned recheck helps monitor heart health as the cat matures.

Is DNA testing the same as echocardiogram screening?

No. DNA testing checks selected known variants, while echocardiography evaluates the actual heart structure and function at the time of the exam.

Why are blood pressure and thyroid status mentioned?

Some conditions, including high blood pressure and hyperthyroidism, can cause heart wall thickening and should be considered before diagnosing HCM.

Why publish the report pages?

We share them to make the screening process more transparent and easier for families to understand.

Sources and Further Reading

These references are helpful starting points for understanding feline cardiomyopathy and heart ultrasound screening.

Cornell Feline Health Center Read HCM overview
Cornell Cardiomyopathy Guide Read cardiomyopathy guide
ACVIM Consensus Statement Read clinical guidelines

Explore Our HCM Screening Pages

View our cats’ screening reports, learn what HCM means, or return to the main HCM screening overview.

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