ECHO (Echocardiogram)
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An echocardiogram — often called an ECHO or 2D Echo — is an ultrasound scan of the heart. It shows the size of the heart’s chambers, the structure and function of its valves, and how strongly it is pumping. It is one of the most useful cardiac tests available. At St. Stephen’s Hospital, echocardiograms are performed and reported by cardiologists or trained sonographers, with reports shared directly with your treating doctor.
Standard echocardiography (transthoracic echo, or TTE) uses an ultrasound probe placed on your chest. The most common version is a 2D Echo, which produces moving images of the heart in real time.
Specialised versions include: Doppler echo (measures blood flow), stress echo (done before and after exercise), and transoesophageal echo or TEE (probe passed down the food pipe for closer views — done under sedation, used in selected cases).
A standard transthoracic echo takes 30 to 45 minutes. A stress echo takes about an hour. A TEE takes 30 to 60 minutes including the sedation and recovery period.
You lie on your left side on a couch. The sonographer applies a gel to your chest and moves the ultrasound probe across the chest wall. You may be asked to roll, take a deep breath, or hold your breath briefly. You will probably see your own heart on the screen — and hear the sound of the blood flow, which can be loud at times. This is normal. For a TEE, sedation is given through a vein. A flexible probe is passed through the mouth into the food pipe (oesophagus), which sits just behind the heart. This gives much clearer images. You are monitored throughout and recovered for an hour afterwards.
An echo report describes the size of each heart chamber, how well the heart is pumping (ejection fraction or EF), and the condition of the heart valves. An EF of 55% or higher is generally considered normal. Lower numbers indicate weaker pumping function. Valves are described as normal, mildly leaking (regurgitation), or narrowed (stenosis). The pressure inside certain chambers and the thickness of the heart muscle are also reported. Your doctor will interpret these in light of your symptoms and decide on the next steps.
EF is the percentage of blood pumped out of the left ventricle with each beat. Normal is 55% or higher. EF of 40 54% is mildly reduced; below 40% is significantly reduced and usually needs treatment.
Yes, the ultrasound gel feels cool when first applied. It warms up quickly. The team can warm it slightly on request.
They give different information. ECG looks at the heart's electricity. Echo looks at the heart's structure and pumping. Both are commonly used together rather than one instead of the other.
Many heart conditions change over time. Tracking how your heart is doing year to year is more useful than a single snapshot.
Not directly. A standard echo shows pumping function and valves, not the coronary arteries. To check for blocked arteries, your doctor may order a stress test, CT coronary angiogram, or invasive angiogram.
Ultrasound of the heart — no radiation