Whether medical imaging is pre-procedural or present in the lab while cardiac work is
underway, excellent images are the linchpin to repairing everything from atrial septal
defects in children to arterial lesions in adults.
Efficiency is the ubiquitous hospital edict, and interventional
cardiologists (and some radiologists) are responding by incorporating the most efficient,
most reliable and safest imaging technologies into cardiac cath lab work. Whether imaging
is pre-procedural or present in the lab while the cardiac work is underway, excellent
images are the linchpin to repairing everything from atrial septal defects (ASDs) in
children to arterial lesions in adults.
New facilities are considering positioning complementary imaging technology such
as magnetic resonance imaging next to the cath lab, possibly and eventually within
the lab. As interventional cardiologists and their patients benefit from imaging advances,
issues remain to be dealt with, including better resolution and image integration.
Nevertheless, cutting-edge cardiac cath lab technology is here and now, not down an
uncertain road. And predictably, less radiation exposure is a driver in and around the
cath lab.
Intracardiac echo
Childrens Memorial Hospital (Chicago) is using intracardiac
echocardiography (ICE) with its thin catheters to take dynamic pictures inside young
patients hearts. The technology is favored for a number of reasons.
Children cant have transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE) without having
general anesthesia, David Wax, pediatric cardiologist at Childrens Memorial Hospital
says. They wont sit still having a big hose put down their throat. Even adults
find it very unpleasant. And its uncomfortable the next day. So [ICE is preferable]
from a perspective of being able to avoid anesthesia and the cost of anesthesia.
The whole circumstance, according to Wax, is sterile and some doctors, Wax included,
prefer the approach because they are controlling the echo as theyre doing the
procedure.
For young adults, for instance, intracardiac echo is used in cases where patients have
strokes and are found to have an opening in their heart similar to an atrial septal
defect. The condition, patent foramen ovale (PFO), involves a flap that does not seal over
and sometimes remains patent. It is believed that PFO allows the passage of small clots
from the veins in the leg, for example, as they pass up to the heart. They would otherwise
go to the lungs and be filtered out there.
Please refer to the March 2003
issue for the complete story.
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Martin St. Denis