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  1. #1
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    Any people with HCM positive MCs here?

    The other heath testing thread got me wondering whether there were any other members with MCs known to be heterozygous (or homozygous) for the MyBPC mutation?

    We have a female retiree that is hetero (she was retired when found hetero, prior to first litter). She is going to be 5 in April. Had her first heart screening with a certified vet cardiologist this last year at age 4. No discernible heart changes yet, so we are hoping for a long life. There has been a only bit of research on prognosis of hetero cats. Seems to be a wide range of possible outcomes from essentially normal lifespan with minor heart changes to sudden death by age 3. We plan on having our girl screened every couple of years as long as she is asymptomatic and clear on echos.

  2. #2
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    I have Athena who is N/HCM she is ultrasoundet at 1,5 years of age and had one litter and are going to be spayed any day now.
    And i have Maya also N/HCM she is OK by ultrasound at 3 and 5 years of age, she had one litter 5 boys, 4 of them N/N 1 unknown and she is now expecting her second and last litter. I hope the luck is with me this time also so that the kittens will be negative. I will spay Maya an go on with a N/N daughter if there will be any.
    All my other cats are tested N/N or negative by parents.

  3. #3
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    Good to hear your 5 year old hetero is totally negative on echo still (as was ours at 4...they are close in age actually).

    The original Meurs paper on her mutation discovery is rather alarming:

    Of the 10 cats with a heterozygous mutation, three are still alive at 8–12 years of age with moderate disease and only one died suddenly, a larger number of these cats developed severe HCM and died of heart failure. One died of an unrelated cause.
    The Meurs paper can be read/downloaded for free from:
    A cardiac myosin binding protein C mutation in the Maine Coon cat with familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy -- Meurs et al. 14 (23): 3587 -- Human Molecular Genetics

    There is a more recent German study that is more hopeful:
    Wiley InterScience

    This paper is not available for free (as far as I know), but I have a copy. A couple of key quotes from the paper:

    In our study, although many of the recruited Hetero animals were young and therefore may not have fully expressed their phenotype, >25% of Hetero cats with normal echocardiography were >4 years old, with ages ranging from 4.1 to 11.5 years. This suggests that the MyBPC3-A31P mutation may be associated with a benign course of the disease at least in some Hetero Maine Coon cats.
    In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the heterozygous status for the MyBPC3-A31P mutation is not systematically associated with occurrence of LVH and major myocardial dysfunction in the Maine Coon breed, as some Hetero cats may live years without overt signs of HCM and with only minor regional diastolic myocardial dysfunction. Further studies with long-term longitudinal follow-ups of Hetero cats are however required to better establish the MyBPC3 genotype-phenotype correlations in older animals.
    (LVH stands for left ventricular hypertrophy--the essence of HCM.)

    This is obviously much better news for hetero cats! Let's hope it is the more accurate (it was done with a larger population of heteros, 38, than the earlier paper, 10). The cats were not that old, however, so what will happen as they approach 8-10 is less clear.
    Last edited by mcguy; 22nd February 2010 at 06:07 AM.

 

 

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