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Sleeping and Resting Respiratory Rates of Dogs and Cats with Heart Disease
Revised: October 23, 2023
Published: May 22, 2015

Brown and white dog sitting on a porch chair
Photo by Sharon Shriver

Many heart diseases, when severe enough, result in congestive heart failure.  When the left side of the heart is diseased, this presents as a build-up of fluid in the lungs, causing breathing difficulties and shortness of breath which can be severe. However, before such signs occur, many animals start to have an increase in their breathing rate.  This can be subtle and is best detected when your pet is sleeping (because there are not a lot of things that affect your pet’s breathing rate when they’re asleep).

Tan long coat Chihuahua laying on a gray couch
Willow is a 14-year-old Chihuahua with CHF. Photo courtesy of Janet Stomberg

Gray cat sleeping on a wooden floor.

Your veterinarian can use your observational skills and record of your pet’s breathing to help manage your pet's heart disease in three ways:

1. Preclinical heart disease.  Heart disease in dogs and cats that is destined to cause congestive heart failure progresses over time from mild disease to more severe disease. When it gets severe enough, fluid builds up in the lungs (congestive heart failure), requiring treatments to relieve this congestion.  However, before it reaches that stage, your veterinarian might have you start measuring the sleeping respiratory rate (SRR) so that you catch congestive heart failure at the earliest stage possible.  Usually, such measurements start when the disease is moderate-to-severe, but not yet showing signs of congestive heart failure.  Your veterinarian will use tests such as chest X-rays (radiographs) or cardiac ultrasound (echocardiography) to determine when measuring the SRR is appropriate.

2. Diagnosis of congestive heart failure.  Sometimes signs of congestive heart failure are subtle and easily confused with other non-cardiac diseases. In such cases, your veterinarian might get you to measure your pet’s sleeping respiratory rate (SRR) to help rule out a diagnosis of congestive heart failure – if the rate is normal, congestive heart failure is extremely unlikely and your veterinarian can focus on other causes of your pet’s clinical signs.

3. Management of congestive heart failure (pulmonary edema).  If your veterinarian diagnoses your pet with congestive heart failure and institutes treatment for it (with diuretics and other drugs), they will probably get you to monitor the response to medications by measuring your pet’s sleeping respiratory rate (SRR) at home.  Studies are finding that measuring the SRR is a very sensitive way to tell if your pet’s heart failure is being well controlled by drugs or not.  When the drugs are working well, the pet should be feeling good, but more importantly, the SRR should be between 10-25 breaths per minute (in most cases, it will be less than 30 breaths per minute).  If the SRR increases or exceeds 30 breaths per minute, it might indicate that there is fluid building back up in the lungs.  Your veterinarian will generally recommend you return to the clinic to confirm this is the case, or they might instruct you to increase the dose of diuretics.

How to measure SRR

SRR and RRR (Resting respiratory rate) should be obtained when the pet is comfortable, in a comfortable environment (not too hot or cold), and not after any exertional activity.  If sleeping, the pet should be in a “deep sleep”, not in a twitching or “dreaming” state.

The respiratory rate should be counted for a full minute if possible, although 30 seconds is often sufficient.  One breath is made up of 2 components: breathing in (inspiration or inhalation) and breathing out (expiration or exhalation).

These videos show 2 dogs and a cat either sleeping or resting quietly.  The counter records each breath for over a full minute. Watch these to understand how this is done.

Canine Sleeping Respiratory Rate

Feline Sleeping Respiratory Rate

Canine Resting Respiratory Rate

There’s an App for That!

Apple Store: Ceva’s Cardalis RR app

These allow you to measure the respiratory rate by tapping the screen of your smartphone or tablet in time with the breathing. Once you've got the results, you can email them to your veterinarian and talk about the next steps for your pet's care.

"Health Collars" to Monitor Sleeping Respiratory Rates in Dogs

In the last several years, electronic collars that record various biometric data, have become popular. These collars claim to measure heart rate, body temperature, exercise, and respiratory rate. No studies exist examining the use of these collars in diagnosing heart disease and congestive heart failure in dogs.

Most of these collars do not measure respiratory rate directly but use the variations in heart rate that occur with breathing in dogs when they are resting or sleeping. Normal dogs vary their heart rates with each breath, allowing these variations to be measured to estimate the respiratory rate. However, when a dog develops congestive heart failure, this normal variation in heart rate disappears. Once treated successfully with drugs, this variation can return.

Therefore, the device could, in theory, be used to measure sleeping or resting respiratory rates. However, instead of looking for an increase in the sleeping or resting respiratory rate, impending CHF might be suspected if the device failed to measure the respiratory rate (because the heart rate variation had disappeared). It would not give you a higher respiratory rate measurement (above the dog’s normal resting or sleeping rate) but would give you a measurement error. 

In such cases, you could consult with your veterinarian to confirm that the heart disease had destabilized enough to make the collar stop working properly.

Always talk to your veterinarian if you are unsure about how to measure your pet's resting respiratory rate, or if you notice changes in your pet's breathing including a rate increase, more respiratory effort, coughing, or other concerns. 

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The information contained here is for general purposes only and is not a substitute for advice from your veterinarian. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk.

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