Study Brings Value of Echocardiography Into Focus

ByABC News
February 12, 2009, 1:01 AM

Feb. 12 -- WEDNESDAY, Feb. 11 (HealthDay News) -- The advanced imaging technique called contrast echocardiography had a significant impact on the diagnosis and treatment of people hospitalized with heart disease, a new study found.

Echocardiography bounces sound waves into the body to get a detailed image of the moving heart. If that image isn't clear enough, it can be improved by injecting a substance, called a contrast agent, that reflects the sound waves better.

"After contrast echocardiography, the percentage of uninterpretable studies decreased from 11.7 percent to 0.3 percent, and technically difficult studies decreased from 86.7 percent to 9.8 percent," said a report published online Feb. 11 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

"The importance of the study is that it is really the first time that we measured the impact of contrast echocardiography on assessment of ventricular function," said study leader Dr. William A. Zoghbi, professor of medicine and director of the Cardiovascular Imaging Center at the Methodist DeBakey Heart and Vascular Center in Houston. "It measured the impact of it in clinical practice -- how does contrast echocardiography influence clinical management," Zoghbi said.

Ventricular function is a measure of the heart's blood-pumping ability.

In this trial of 632 patients, use of the technique avoided additional diagnostic procedures in 33 percent of cases and altered drug management in 10 percent of cases, Zoghbi said.

Contrast echocardiography was most useful in the intensive care unit, he said. "The individuals there are usually sicker yet more highly instrumented, so usually studies are more difficult," Zoghbi said. "This is crucial for day-to-day patient management, particularly for hospitalized patients."

The technology is widely available in U.S. hospitals, he said. "What we've shown is that contrast echocardiography is important in complex cases, where the first images are not clear enough," Zoghbi said. "In our experience, we use it in about 15 percent of patients that are hospitalized."