Echocardiography
Echocardiography is an area of diagnostic imaging that focuses on the heart. Echocardiograms are diagnostic tests that create detailed, moving pictures of your heart in action. An “echo” test is helpful in pinpointing areas of the heart muscle that aren’t contracting well because of poor blood flow or injury from a previous heart attack. Doctors order echocardiograms to examine the heart’s structure and see how well the heart is functioning.
The procedure uses sound waves to create these images, much like an ultrasound. In fact, echos are sometimes referred to as heart ultrasounds or diagnostic cardiac ultrasounds.
INFORMATION OBTAINED THROUGH ECHOCARDIOGRAMS
Echocardiograms are simple outpatient procedures that require no injections or incisions and cause no discomfort. These imaging tools provide much more detail than a plain x-ray image and involve no radiation exposure. Echocardiograms can provide many different types of information. For example:
Single-dimension images, known as M-modes, allow technicians to obtain accurate measurements of the heart chambers.
A Doppler ultrasound shows how well blood flows through the heart’s chambers and valves.
A 2-D Echo can display a cross-sectional “slice” of the beating heart, including the chambers, valves, and the major blood vessels that exit from the left and right ventricles.
Echos can be used to detect possible blood clots inside the heart, fluid buildup in the pericardium (the sac around the heart), and problems with the aorta.
Echocardiograms provide doctors with the following information:
The size and shape of the heart
The size, thickness, and movement of the heart’s walls
How well the heart moves
The heart’s pumping strength
Heart valve function and size
Blood vessel health
Blood flow and direction
Tumor location and identification
Blood clot discovery
Abnormal holes in the heart
WHY DOCTORS ORDER ECHOCARDIOGRAMS
Physicians order echos when they are concerned with a patient’s heart function and health. An echocardiogram may be ordered if the patient:
Has a heart murmur
Has had a heart attack
Has unexplained chest pains
Has had rheumatic fever
Has a congenital heart defect