Common Diagnostic Procedures Flashcards
What is the purpose of ambulatory ECG (Holter monitoring)?
used for 24-48 hours to evaluate cardiac rhythm, efficacy of medications, and pacemaker function and then correlated with a diary of the patient’s symptoms and activities
What is an angiography and what is it used for?
a radiological examination where a patient is injected with a contrast medium into their blood vessels to show the location of plaques in the coronary arteries and the extent of occlusion
What is a bronchoscopy and what is it used for?
a procedure where a camera attached to wiring is placed down a patient’s bronchial tree to visualize the area for tumors, bronchitis, foreign bodies, and bleeding, it can also be used to remove tissue specimens by biopsy or lavage
What is a cardiac catheterization and what is it used for?
a thin catheter injected into an artery and maneuvered tot he coronary arteries where a dye is injected to measure BP in the heart, oxygen in the blood and evaluate narrowing or occlusion of coronary arteries
What is a carotid ultrasound and what is it used for?
a procedure where airwaves are used to examine and visualize the carotid arteries to screen for blockages, evaluate placement of a stent, and screen the function of the arteries after carotid endarterectomy
What is a chest radiograph and what is it used for?
medical imaging of the chest to visualize the anatomy of the chest and also reveal fluid in the lungs or pleural space, pneumonia, emphysema, cancer, etc.
What is an echocardiograph and what is it used for?
What are the two most common types?
procedure that uses high frequency sounds waves non-invasively to evaluate the function of the heart in real time
Transthoracic Echocardiogram (TTE) uses a transducer on a patient’s chest
Transesophageal Echocardiogram (TEE) uses a transducer that is passed into the esophagus and provides a more detailed image of the heart due to esophagus’ close proximity to the heart
What is electrophysiologic testing and what is it used for?
used to evaluate the rhythm or electrical conduction abnormalities in the heart using 3-5 catheters inserted into blood vessels and threaded to the heart to help locate abnormal tissue that causes cardiac arrythmias
What is fluoroscopy and what is it used for?
a continuous x-ray procedure that shows the heart and lungs but due to high radiation exposure has been mostly replaced by echocardiograms
Which kind of catheter measures pulmonary artery wedge pressure and left atrial pressure?
a balloon catheter a.k.a Swan-Ganz catheter which is placed in the pulmonary artery
What kind of catheter can be used to measure cardiac output?
thermodilution catheter
What kind of catheter can measure pressure in the vena cava and right atrium?
central venous pressure line
What is Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (nuclear stress test or radionuclide stress test) and what is it used for?
a test that shows how well the heart muscle is perfused at rest and under exercise stress by injecting a radionuclide agent into the blood at rest and at a max level of exercise to reveal areas that have reduced blood supply due to narrowing of one or more coronary arteries
What is a Pharmacological Stress Test and what is it used for?
What drugs are typically used?
- a diagnostic procedure in which cardiac stress is induced by drugs when contraindications to routine exercise exist or when patient is unable to exercise due to various reasons
- it is used with imaging modalities such as radionuclide imaging and echocardiograms
Common drugs used include adenosine, dipyridamole, and dobutamine
What is phonocardiography and what is it used for?
a test which creates an image of the sound procuded by the heart and great vessels to supplement auscultation and improves the detection of S3 and S4 sounds in the diagnosis of heart failure