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Echocardiography: Not To Be Confused With

Echocardiography, often called an echo, uses ultrasound to create images of the heart. It is a noninvasive test that provides information on heart size and function, including pumping capacity and tissue damage. An echocardiogram can detect issues like cardiomyopathies and help determine whether chest pain is related to heart disease. It can also produce Doppler ultrasound images to assess blood flow through the heart and check for abnormalities. Echocardiography is performed by sonographers or doctors trained in its use and has become a widely used diagnostic tool in cardiology.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views3 pages

Echocardiography: Not To Be Confused With

Echocardiography, often called an echo, uses ultrasound to create images of the heart. It is a noninvasive test that provides information on heart size and function, including pumping capacity and tissue damage. An echocardiogram can detect issues like cardiomyopathies and help determine whether chest pain is related to heart disease. It can also produce Doppler ultrasound images to assess blood flow through the heart and check for abnormalities. Echocardiography is performed by sonographers or doctors trained in its use and has become a widely used diagnostic tool in cardiology.

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greathari1998
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Not to be confused with Electrocardiography (ECG).

Echocardiography
Intervention

An abnormal Echocardiogram. Image shows a
mid-muscular ventricular septal defect. The trace in
the lower left shows the cardiac cycleand the red
mark the time in the cardiac cycle that the image
was captured. Colors are used to represent the
velocity and direction of blood flow.
ICD-9-CM 88.72
MeSH D004452
OPS-301 code: 3-052
MedlinePlus 003869

Sonographer doing pediatric echocardiography

Echocardiogram in the parasternal long-axis view, showing a measurement of the heart's left
ventricle
Echocardiogram, often referred to as a cardiac echo or simply an echo, is
asonogram of the heart. (It is not abbreviated as ECG, which in medicine usually
refers to an electrocardiogram.) Echocardiography uses standard two-
dimensional, three-dimensional, and Doppler ultrasound to create images of the
heart.
Echocardiography has become routinely used in the diagnosis, management,
and follow-up of patients with any suspected or known heart diseases. It is one of
the most widely used diagnostic tests in cardiology. It can provide a wealth of
helpful information, including the size and shape of the heart (internal chamber
size quantification), pumping capacity, and the location and extent of any tissue
damage. An Echocardiogram can also give physicians other estimates of heart
function such as a calculation of the cardiac output, ejection fraction, and
diastolic function (how well the heart relaxes).
Echocardiography can help detect cardiomyopathies, such as hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, and many others. The use of Stress
Echocardiography may also help determine whether any chest pain or
associated symptoms are related to heart disease. The biggest advantage to
echocardiography is that it is noninvasive (doesn't involve breaking the skin or
entering body cavities) and has no known risks or side effects.
Not only can an echocardiogram create ultrasound images of heart structures,
but it can also produce accurate assessment of the blood flowing through the
heart, using pulsed or continuous wave Doppler ultrasound. This allows
assessment of both normal and abnormal blood flow through the heart. Color
Doppler as well as spectral Doppler is used to visualize any abnormal
communications between the left and right side of the heart, any leaking of blood
through the valves (valvular regurgitation), and to estimate how well the valves
open (or do not open in the case of valvular stenosis).
Echocardiography was also the first ultrasound subspecialty to use intravenous
contrast. (See Contrast Echocardiography)
Echocardiography is performed by cardiac sonographers, cardiac physiologists
(UK) or doctors trained in echocardiography

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