Dynamic Echocardiography

Dynamic Echocardiography combines textbook, case-based, and multimedia approaches to cover the latest advances in this rapidly evolving specialty. The experts at the American Society of Echocardiography (ASE) present new developments in 3D echocardiography, aortic and mitral valve disease, interventional and intraoperative echocardiography, new technologies, and more. You'll have everything you need to apply the latest techniques in echocardiography and get the best results.in print and online at www.expertconsult.com. INDICE: Section I. Physics and Instrumentation 1. General principles of echocardiography 2. Three-Dimensional Echocardiography 3. Doppler Principles 4. Tissue Doppler Imaging and Speckle Tracking Echocardiography 5. Tissue harmonic imaging Section II. Transthoracic Echocardiography (TTE) 6. Transthoracic Echocardiography: Nomenclature and standard views 7. Technical quality 8. Transthoracic Echocardiography Tomographic Views 9. M- Mode Echocardiography 10. Doppler Echocardiography: Normal Antegrade Flow Patterns Section III. Transesophageal Echocardiography (TEE) 11. Protocol, Probe Insertion and Manipulation, Risks and Complications 12. Transesophageal Echocardiography: Tomographic View 13. Applications of Transesophageal Echocardiography 14. Pitfalls and Artifacts in Transesophageal Echocardiography Section IV.  Intracardiac Echocardiography (ICE) 15. Applications of Intracardiac Echocardiography 16. Limitations of Intracardiac Echocardiography Section V. Intravascular Echocardiography (IVUS) 17. Intravascular Ultrasound: Instrumentation and Technique 18. Intravascular Ultrasound: Applications and Limitations Section VI.  Hand-Held Echocardiography 19. Hand-carried cardiac ultrasound: Background, Instrumentation and Technique 20. Focused Cardiac Ultrasound Section VII. Contrast Echocardiography 21. Contrast Echocardiography: Introduction 22. Ultrasonic contrast agents 23. Physical Properties of Microbubble Ultrasound Contrast Agents 24. Applications of Ultrasound Contrast Agents 25. Stress Echocardiography and Contrast 26. Contrast-enhanced carotid imaging Section VIII. Left Ventricular Systolic Function 27. Introduction 28. Left Ventricular Systolic function: Basic Principles 29. Global LV systolic function 30. Regional Left Ventricular Systolic Function 31. Assessment of left ventricular dyssynchrony Section IX. Right Heart 32. Right Ventricular Anatomy 33. The Physiologic Basis of Right Ventricular Echocardiography 34. Assessment of RV Systolic and Diastolic Function 35. Right Ventricular Hemodynamics 36. The right atrium 37. Pulmonary embolism Section X. Diastolic Function 38. Physiology of diastole 39. Methods of Assessment 40. Echo Doppler parameters of diastolic function 41. Estimation of LV filling pressures 42. Clinical Recommendations for Echo Labs for Assessment of LV Diastolic Function 43. Newer Methods to Assess Diastolic Function 44. Causes of diastolic dysfunction Section XI. Left Atrium 45. Assessment of Left Atrial Size 46. Assessment of Left Atrial Function Section XII. Ischemic Heart Disease 47. Introduction to Ischemic Heart Disease 48. Ischemic Heart Disease: Basic Principles 49. Acute Chest Pain Syndromes: Differential Diagnosis. 50. Echocardiography in Acute Myocardial Infarction 51. Echocardiography in Stable Coronary Artery Disease 52. Old Myocardial Infarction 53. End-Stage Cardiomyopathy Due to Coronary Artery Disease 54. Coronary artery anomalies Section XIII.  Stress Echo 55. Stress Echocardiography - Introduction 56. Effects of Exercise, Pharmacological Stress and Pacing on Cardiovascular System 57. Diagnostic criteria, accuracy (sens/spec) 58. Methodology 59. Image acquisition 60. Prognosis 61. Viability 62. Contrast-enhanced stress echo 63. 3D-stress echo 64. Valve disease 65. Appropriateness Use Criteria for Stress Echocardiography 66. Comparison with other techniques Section XIV. Cardiomyopathies 67. Introduction to Cardiomyopathies 68. Pathophysiology and Variants of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy 69. Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Pathophysiology, Functional Features and Treatment of Outflow Tract Obstruction 70. Differential of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy versus Secondary Conditions that Mimic HCM 71. Echocardiographic Features of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy: Mechanism of Systolic Anterior Motion 72. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: Assessment of therapy 73. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: Screening of relatives 74. Apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy 75. Echocardiography in Athletic Preparticipation Screening 76. Dilated Cardiomyopathy: Etiology, Diagnostic Criteria and Echocardiography Features 77. Imaging in Familial Dilated Cardiomyopathy 78. Echocardiographic Predictors of Outcome in Patients with Dilated Cardiomyopathy 79. Right Ventricle in Dilated Cardiomyopathy 80. Restrictive cardiomyopathy: Classification 81. Cardiac Amyloidosis - Echocardiographic Features 82. Hereditary and Acquired Infiltrative Cardiomyopathy 83. Endomyocardial Fibrosis 84. Restriction versus constriction 85. Echocardiography in Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy 86. Echocardiographic Analysis of Left Ventricular Noncompaction 87. Takotsubo-like Transient LV Dysfunction: Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy 88. Systematic Echocardiographic Approach to Left Ventricular Assist Device Therapy 89. Post-transplant echo evaluation 90. Familial Cardiomyopathies 91. Echocardiography in Cor Pulmonale/Pulmonaryheart disease 92. Echocardiographic Evaluation of Functional Tricuspid Regurgitation 93. Echocardiographic Evaluation of the Right Heart: Limitations and Technical Considerations Section XV. Aortic Stenosis 94. Aortic stenosis morphology 95. Quantification of aortic stenosis severity 96. Asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis 97. Risk stratification - timing of surgery 98. Low-Flow, low gradient, poor LV 99. Low-Flow, low gradient, low stroke volume, normal LV 100. Stress echo in AS 101. Discrete subvalvular AS Section XVI. Aortic Regurgitation 102. Introduction to Aortic Regurgitation 103. Etiology and LV response to AR 104. AR pathophysiology (vs MR path physiology) 105. Quantification of AR 106. Risk stratification - timing of surgery Section XVII. Mitral Stenosis 107. Introduction 108. Rheumatic mitral stenosis 109. Quantification of MS 110. Other etiologies of MS, and Complex diseases, situations that mimic MS 111. Role of hemodynamic stress testing 112. Consequences of MS Section XVIII.  Mitral Regurgitation 113. Introduction to Mitral Regurgitation 114. Etiologies and Mechanisms 115. Mitral valve prolapse 116. Quantification of MR 117. Asymptomatic severe MR 118. Role of exercise stress testing 119. Ischemic MR Section XIX. Tricuspid Regurgitation 120. Introduction, Etiology and Natural History of Tricuspid Regurgitation 121. Quantification of TR 122. Indications for surgery 123. TR procedures Section XX. Pulmonic Regurgitation 124. Introduction and Etiology 125. Semi-quantification Section XXI. Prosthetic Valves 126. Introduction 127. Classification of valve types -> fluid dynamics 128. Aortic prosthetic valves 129. Mitral prosthetic valves 130. Periprosthetic leaks 131. Tricuspid prosthetic valves 132. Mitral valve repair (echo findings) Section XXII. Infective Endocarditis 133. Introduction and Echocardiographic Features of Infective Endocarditis 134. Role of TTE vs TEE (include diagnostic accuracy) 135. Prediction of embolic risk 136. Echo and decision-making for surgery 137. Intra-operative Echo 138. Limitations/Technical considerations Section XXIII. Pericardial Diseases 139. Pericardial diseases 140. Normal pericardial anatomy 141. Pericarditis 142. Pericardial effusion 143. Constrictive pericarditis 144. Effusive - Constrictive pericarditis 145. Pericardial cysts and Congenital absence of pericardium Section XXIV. Tumors and Masses 146. Introduction 147. Primary benign, malignant and metastatic cardiac tumors 148. LV thrombi 149. LA thrombi 150. Right heart thrombi 151. Normal anatomic variants, artifacts 152. Role of contrast echo for assessment of intracardiac masses 153. Echo-guided biopsy of intracardiac masses 154. Cardiac sources of emboli (CSOE) Section XXV. Diseases of the Aorta 155. Introduction 156. Aortic atherosclerosis 157. Aortic aneurysm 158. Sinus of Valsalva aneurysm 159. Acute aortic syndrome 160. Intramural hematoma 161. Penetrating Atherosclerotic Ulcer 162. Aortic trauma 163. Intraoperative echo 164. Post-op echo (serial follow-up) Section XXVI.  Adult Congenital Heart Disease 165. Introduction 166. Systematic approach to adult CHD 167. Shunt lesions (ASD, VSD, PDA, etc) 168. Obstructive lesions 169. Complex congenital heart disease 170. Adult congenital heart disease with prior surgical repair Section XXVII. Systemic Diseases 171. Hypertension 172. Diabetes 173. End-stage renal disease 174. Obesity 175. Rheumatic fever 176. SLE 177. Antiphospholipid antibody syndrome 178. Carcinoid 179. Amyloid 180. Sarcoidosis 181. Eosinophilic endomyocardial disease 182. Endocrine disease 183. Chagas disease 184. Sickle cell disease 185. HIV 186. Cardiotoxic effects of cancer therapy 187. Pregnacy and the heart 188. Cocaine Section XXVIII. Echo in the ER 189. Emergency clinical presentation Section XXIX. Interventional Echocardiography 190. Introduction 191. Transcatheter aortic valve replacement 192. Mitral Clip 193. Mitral balloon valvuloplasty 194. Transcatheter valve in valve implantation 195. ASD and VSD closure 196. LV pseudoaneurysm closure 197. Patent foramen ovale closure 198. Fusion of 3D echocardiography with fluoroscopy for intervention guidance Section XXX. Miscellaneous Topics in Echocardiography 199. Appropriateness use criteria 200. CIMT imaging 201. Coronary artery imaging

  • ISBN: 978-0-323-26011-4
  • Editorial: Saunders
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 816
  • Fecha Publicación: 02/03/2015
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés