Know about echo-cardiogram

in #mgsc6 years ago

In my this blog you’ll get complete basic information about this test which was generally asked by doctors in hospital. To study the heartbeats and internal veins and complication of hearts. So let’s begin it with beginning!

An echo-cardiogram uses sound waves to produce images of your heart. This commonly used test allows your doctor to see your heart beating and pumping blood. Your doctor can use the images from an echo-cardiogram to identify heart disease.
Depending on what information your doctor needs, you may have one of several types of echo-cardiograms. Each type of echo-cardiogram has few, if any, risks involved.
Why it’s done
Your doctor may suggest an echo-cardiogram if he or she suspects problems with the valves or chambers of your heart or if heart problems are the cause of symptoms such as shortness of breath or chest pain. An echo-cardiogram can also be used to detect congenital heart defects in unborn babies (fetal echo-cardiogram).
Depending on what information your doctor needs, you may have one of the following kinds of echo-cardiograms:
Transthoracic echo-cardiogram
This is a standard, noninvasive echo-cardiogram. A technician (sonographer) spreads gel on your chest and then presses a device known as a transducer firmly against your skin, aiming an ultrasound beam through your chest to your heart. The transducer records the sound wave echoes from your heart. A computer converts the echoes into moving images on a monitor.
If your lungs or ribs block the view, you may need a small amount of liquid (contrast agent) injected through an intravenous line (IV) that will make your heart’s structures show up more clearly on a monitor, improving the images.
Transesophageal echo-cardiogram
If it’s difficult to get a clear picture of your heart with a standard echo-cardiogram or if there is reason to see the heart and valves in more detail, your doctor may recommend a transesophageal echo-cardiogram.
In this procedure, a flexible tube containing a transducer is guided down your throat and into your esophagus, which connects your mouth to your stomach. From there, the transducer can be positioned to obtain more-detailed images of your heart. Your throat will be numbed, and you’ll have medications to help you relax during a transesophageal echo-cardiogram.
Doppler echo-cardiogram
When sound waves bounce off blood cells moving through your heart and blood vessels, they change pitch. These changes (Doppler signals) can help your doctor measure the speed and direction of the blood flow in your heart.
Doppler techniques are used in most transthoracic and transesophageal echo-cardiograms, and they can be used to check blood flow problems and blood pressures in the arteries of your heart that traditional ultrasound might not detect. Sometimes the blood flow shown on the monitor is colorized to help your doctor pinpoint any problems.
Stress echo-cardiogram
Some heart problems – particularly those involving the coronary arteries that supply blood to your heart muscle – occur only during physical activity.
For a stress echo-cardiogram, ultrasound images of your heart are taken before and immediately after walking on a treadmill or riding a stationary bike. If you’re unable to exercise, you may get an injection of a medication to make your heart pump as hard as if you were exercising.
Dr. Shivani Bhardwaj

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