New and advanced diagnostic tests and tools are constantly being introduced to further understand the complexity of disease, injury, and congenital or acquired abnormalities. The following are just a few of the diagnostic tests that have been used/are being used to further understand and identify cardiovascular disease. For more specific information, consult your cardiologist or physician.
- Cardiac CT Angiogram (CTA)
A heart imaging test that helps determine if deposits of fat or plaque have narrowed coronary arteries. It uses CT technology and intravenous (IV) contrast material (dye) to take three-dimensional pictures of the heart.
- Electrophysiology (EP)
A study of the electrical activity in the heart (how the heart beats). EP is used to diagnose and treat arrhythmias (abnormal heart beats or rhythms).
- Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG)
A test that records the electrical activity of the heart, shows abnormal rhythms (arrhythmias or dysrhythmias), and detects heart muscle damage.
- Signal Average Electrocardiogram (SAE)
A test that is much like an ECG, but takes longer because it records more information related to abnormal electrical activity.
- Stress Test (usually with ECG; also called treadmill or exercise ECG)
A test that is given while a patient walks on a treadmill or pedals a stationary bike to monitor the heart during exercise. Breathing and blood pressure rates are also monitored. A stress test may be used to detect coronary artery disease, and/or to determine safe levels of exercise following a heart attack or heart surgery.
- Echocardiogram (also known as echo)
A noninvasive test that uses sound waves to produce a study of the motion of the heart's chambers and valves. The echo sound waves create an image on the monitor as an ultrasound transducer is passed over the heart.
- Transesophageal Echocardiogram (TEE)
A test in which a small transducer is passed down the esophagus to provide a clearer image of heart structures.
- Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Scan
A nuclear scan that gives information about the flow of blood through the coronary arteries to the heart muscle.
- PET F-18 FDG (Fluorodeoxyglucose) Scan
A glucose scan sometimes done immediately after the PET scan to determine if heart muscle has permanent damage.
- Thallium Scans or Myocardial Perfusion Scans
- Resting SPECT Thallium Scan or Myocardial Perfusion Scan
A nuclear scan given while the patient is at rest that may reveal areas of the heart muscle that are not getting enough blood.
- Exercise Thallium Scan or Myocardial Perfusion Scan
A nuclear scan given while the patient is exercising that may reveal areas of the heart muscle that are not getting enough blood.
- Persantine Thallium Scan or Myocardial Perfusion Scan
A nuclear scan given to a patient who is unable to exercise to reveal areas of the heart muscle that are not getting enough blood.
- MUGA Scans/Radionuclide Angiography (RNA) Scans
- Resting Gated Blood Pool Scan (RGBPS), Resting MUGA, or Resting Radionuclide Angiography
A nuclear scan to see how the heart wall moves and how much blood is expelled with each heartbeat, while the patient is at rest.
- Exercise Gated Blood Pool Scan, Exercise MUGA, or Exercise Radionuclide Angiography
A nuclear scan to see how the heart wall moves and how much blood is expelled with each heartbeat, just after the patient has walked on a treadmill or ridden on a stationary bike.
- Holter Monitor
A small, portable, battery-powered ECG machine worn by a patient to record heartbeats on tape over a period of 24 to 48 hours - during normal activities. At the end of the time period, the monitor is returned to the physician's office so the tape can be read and evaluated.
- Event Recorder
A small, portable, battery-powered machine used by a patient to record ECG over a long period of time. Patients may keep the recorder for several weeks. Each time symptoms are experienced, the patient presses a button on the recorder to record the ECG sample. As soon as possible, this sample is transmitted to the physician's office by telephone hookup for evaluation.
- Tilt Table Test
A test performed while the patient is connected to ECG and blood pressure monitors and strapped to a table that tilts the patient from a lying to standing position. This test is to determine if the patient is prone to sudden drops in blood pressure or slow pulse rates with position changes.
- Cardiac Catheterization (also called Coronary Angiogram)
A test in which a small catheter (hollow tube) is guided through a vein or artery into the heart. Dye is given through the catheter, and moving x-ray pictures are made as the dye travels through the heart. This comprehensive test shows: narrowings in the arteries, outside heart size, inside chamber size, pumping ability of the heart, ability of the valves to open and close, as well as a measurement of the pressures within the heart chambers and arteries.