Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The Echocardiogram

The echo test and its uses
The echocardiogram is an extremely useful test for studying the heart’s anatomy. It is non-invasive and entirely safe, and when interpreted by well-trained cardiologists, is very accurate.
How is the echocardiogram performed?
The patient lies on a bed or examination table, and the echo technician places a transducer (a device that resembles a computer mouse) over the chest wall. The transducer is moved back and forth across the chest wall, collecting several “views” of the heart. A Vaseline-like gel is applied to the chest wall to aid in sliding the transducer back and forth. The test takes 30 – 60 minutes to complete.
How does the echocardiogram work?
The transducer placed on the chest sends sound waves toward the heart. Like the sonar on a submarine, the sound waves bounce off the cardiac structures (that is, they “echo” off the heart).The sound wave "echos" are collected by by the transducer.
These returning sound waves are computer-processed, and a two-dimensional image of the beating heart is produced on a television screen. By “aiming” the transducer, most of the important cardiac structures can be imaged by the echocardiogram.
What are some of the variations used with the echocardiogram?
Echocardiograms are sometimes used in conjunction with stress tests. An echo test is made at rest, and then with exercise, looking for changes in the function of the heart muscle when exercise is performed. Deterioration in muscle function during exercise can indicate coronary artery disease.
A Doppler microphone can be used during echocardiography to measure the velocity of blood flow in the heart. This information can be useful in assessing heart valve function.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

What are the risks of having a catheterization or angiography?

Cardiac catheterization and angiography are relatively safe, but because they are invasive procedures involving the heart, several complications are possible. Nobody should have a cardiac catheterization unless there is a reasonable likelihood that the information gained from the procedure will be of significant benefit.
Minor complications of cardiac catheterization include minor bleeding at the site of catheter insertion, temporary heart rhythm disturbances caused by the catheter irritating the heart muscle, and temporary changes in the blood pressure.
More significant complications include perforation of the heart wall (causing a life-threatening condition called cardiac tamponade), sudden blockage of a coronary artery (leading to a heart attack), extensive bleeding, stroke, or an allergic reaction to the dye used in angiography.

What kinds of heart disease can catheterization and angiography help to evaluate?

Cardiac catheterization and angiography can reveal vital information about overall cardiac function, about the function of the individual cardiac chambers, about the cardiac valves (whether they are too narrow (stenosis) or too leaky (regurgitation)), congenital heart defects, and about the location and severity of blockages in the coronary arteries (the arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle). What are some of the variations used with catheterization and angiography? Cardiac catheterization is often used therapeutically, that is, to deliver treatment for various heart problems. Therapeutic catheterizations include procedures to dilate stenotic heart valves, procedures to close atrial septal defects (i.e., a hole in the wall separating the left and right atria), and of course, procedures to relieve blockages in the coronary arteries (angioplasty and stent placement).

How is a catheterization performed?

The patient is brought to the catheterization laboratory and placed on a special examination table. After local anesthesia is given, a catheter is inserted into blood vessels in the groin, arm, or neck. (The catheter is inserted either through a small incision, or by means of a needle-stick. Sometimes, catheters are inserted from more than one site.) The catheter is advanced through the blood vessels to the heart.
Once in the heart, the catheter can be maneuvered to various locations within the heart. By attaching the catheter to a pressure transducer, the pressures within various chambers of heart can be measured. Blood samples can be withdrawn from different locations in order to measure the amount of oxygen in the blood (unusual variations in blood oxygen can signal a "shunt," or abnormal blood flow within the heart, often caused by congenital heart defects.) Finally, by injecting dye through the catheter while a series of rapid x-ray images is recorded, "movies" can be made of the blood flowing through the cardiac chambers, or the through the blood vessels surrounding the heart - a procedure know as angiography (also called arteriography).
Once the procedure is completed, the catheter(s) are removed. Bleeding is controlled by placing pressure on the catheterization site for 30 - 60 minutes.

Heart caths - what you should know

Cardiac catheterization and angiography are tests in which catheters (hollow tubes) are placed into the heart in order to evaluate the anatomy and function of the heart and surrounding blood vessels. So much useful information can be obtained from these tests that they are performed in virtually all patients being considered for cardiac surgery or angioplasty.