# Integrative anatomical and two-dimensional ultrasonographic assessment of the heart in Shetland ponies

**Authors:** Jorge Isidoro Matos, Lidia Pitti, María Parra-Quijano, Alberto Arencibia, Gregorio Ramírez, María Luisa Díaz-Bertrana

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1721000 · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

This study combines ultrasound and dissection to describe the heart anatomy of Shetland ponies, providing a reference for echocardiographic interpretation.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed anatomical and echocardiographic reference for Shetland pony hearts using an integrative approach.

## Key findings

- Anatomical dissection and echocardiography showed correspondence between cardiac structures and ultrasound views.
- Key measurements included a left ventricular diastolic diameter of 5.4 cm and a right ventricular free wall of 1.2 cm.
- Low intra-observer variability (ICC = 0.94) confirmed high repeatability of echocardiographic measurements.

## Abstract

The purpose of this study was to characterize the normal anatomy of the Shetland pony heart through an integrative approach combining two-dimensional transthoracic echocardiography and anatomical dissection.

Transthoracic echocardiographic examinations were performed in 19 clinically healthy Shetland ponies, obtaining standardized longitudinal and cross-sectional two-dimensional views of the heart. These images were used to describe the main echocardiographic windows and to document the visualization of relevant cardiac structures. In parallel, four Shetland pony hearts were dissected and sectioned, allowing an illustrative correspondence between anatomical landmarks and representative echocardiographic views, thereby facilitating a more precise interpretation of the observed structures. Furthermore, basic two-dimensional echocardiographic measurements were determined, including diameters of key cardiovascular chambers and vessels.

Nineteen Shetland ponies (median age 6.8 years; median body weight 136.9 kg) were evaluated. Anatomical analysis allowed identification of the main cardiac structures and their topographic relationships, which showed illustrative correspondence with the two-dimensional echocardiographic views. The largest measurements were the left ventricular diastolic diameter (5.4 cm) and the left atrial diastolic diameter (4.2 cm), while the smallest was the right ventricular free wall in diastole (1.2 cm). Intra-observer variability was low (ICC = 0.94; CV = 3.2%), confirming high measurement repeatability.

Overall, the data obtained provide an adequate anatomical reference and offer relevant insights to support the interpretation of transthoracic two-dimensional echocardiographic studies in Shetland ponies.

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12853646/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12853646