A new study shows a simple bedside scan may be faster and more accurate than X-rays for pets struggling to breathe.
When Your Pet Can’t Breathe
Imagine your dog or cat suddenly starts gasping for air. Their chest is heaving, their gums look pale, and you’re racing to the emergency vet. In that moment, the vet needs to know: Is it heart failure? Pneumonia? A tumor? Or something else?
Respiratory distress is one of the most urgent situations in veterinary medicine. The cause can be tricky to pinpoint, and the right treatment depends entirely on the right diagnosis. For years, vets have relied on chest X-rays to see what’s happening inside. But a newer tool—lung ultrasound—is gaining ground. Now, a large new study compares the two head-to-head.
Breathing trouble is common in pets. It can be caused by heart disease, pneumonia, cancer, or fluid around the lungs. Each cause needs a different treatment. Give a diuretic for heart failure, antibiotics for pneumonia, or oxygen for a collapsed lung—get it wrong, and the pet could get worse.
In emergency settings, speed and accuracy are everything. Vets need to make fast decisions with limited information. X-rays have been the standard for decades, but they require moving a sick pet to a radiology room and waiting for images. Ultrasound can often be done right at the bedside, with the pet lying comfortably.
But is ultrasound as good as X-rays? That’s what this study set out to find.
For years, chest X-rays were the go-to test for pets with breathing problems. They give a broad view of the chest and can show fluid, tumors, or lung changes. But X-rays have limits: they’re less sensitive for early fluid buildup and can’t always tell the difference between similar-looking conditions.
Ultrasound, on the other hand, uses sound waves to create real-time images. It’s excellent at spotting fluid and can show lung tissue in detail. But it can’t see through air-filled lungs, so it has blind spots.
The big question: Which test is more accurate in a real-world emergency?
Think of the lungs like a sponge. In a healthy pet, the sponge is dry and airy. In pneumonia, it’s wet and heavy. In heart failure, fluid leaks into the sponge from the blood vessels. Ultrasound can detect that fluid quickly, like tapping a watermelon to see if it’s ripe. X-rays, meanwhile, show the sponge’s overall shape and density, like looking at a photo of the whole fruit.
In this study, vets used standardized protocols for both tests. They compared the suspected cause from each image to the final diagnosis made by specialists after full workup.
Researchers enrolled 144 pets—83 dogs and 61 cats—with acute respiratory distress. All pets got both a lung ultrasound and a chest X-ray within 24 hours of arrival, with less than an hour between tests. After stabilization, specialists confirmed the true cause using additional tests. The team then compared how often each imaging method guessed right.
The results were close, but X-rays came out slightly ahead. Ultrasound correctly identified the cause in 80.6% of cases. X-rays were correct in 89.1% of cases. When both tests were used together, they were both correct in 77.5% of cases, and at least one test was right in 92.2% of cases.
In dogs, a heart murmur strongly predicted a cardiac cause of breathing trouble—pets with a murmur were nearly 11 times more likely to have heart-related distress. That link wasn’t significant in cats.
This doesn’t mean ultrasound is less useful.
In the blinded re-evaluation, X-rays showed higher agreement between different vets reading the same images. Surprisingly, a less experienced vet had the highest agreement on X-rays, suggesting X-rays may be easier to interpret consistently.
Both lung ultrasound and chest X-rays are valuable tools for initial assessment. Ultrasound is fast, portable, and excellent for detecting fluid. X-rays provide a broader view and may be easier for vets to interpret consistently. In most cases, either test can guide initial treatment. But for complex cases, using both together gives the best picture.
If your pet has breathing trouble, your vet may use either or both of these tests. Neither is available at home—this is emergency care. Talk to your vet about what tests are right for your pet’s situation. Don’t delay seeking help if your pet is struggling to breathe.
This study included only pets that were stable enough to undergo imaging. It didn’t include trauma cases or pets too sick to be imaged. The results may not apply to all pets with respiratory distress. Also, the study was done in a single setting, so results may vary elsewhere.
More research is needed to see how these tests perform in different settings and with sicker pets. Future studies could also explore combining ultrasound with other tools, like blood tests, to improve accuracy. For now, this study gives vets more confidence in using both tests to help pets breathe easier.