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Showing posts with label College. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College. Show all posts

Monday, August 28, 2017

Getting the Most Out of Cardiac Rehab

You’ll benefit most from your cardiac rehab program by becoming
as actively involved in it as possible. Think of yourself as the most
i m p o rtant member of your re c o v e ry team—because you are . Join
with health care professionals in designing or adjusting services to
best meet your needs. Show up for exercise, education, and support
sessions. Ask questions. Report any changes in your feelings or
symptoms.

Finally, be sure to complete the program. Even if you feel that you
already “have a handle” on how to recover, keep in mind that your
needs will continue to change throughout the recovery process.
Your cardiac rehab team can help you respond to those changing
needs, and thereby continue to help you improve your heart health.
So stick with the program!

Getting Your Life Back
As you begin to recover from a heart attack or heart procedure, you
may naturally wonder when you can return to your usual activities,
including work, sexual activity, driving, and travel. Most people can
safely return to most of their normal activities within a few weeks,
as long as they do not have chest pain or other complications.
While you should ask your doctor when you can return to each of
your usual activities, here are some general guidelines:

Work. Most people are able to return to their usual work within
several weeks. Your doctor may ask you to take tests to find out if
you can do the kind of job you did before. While most individuals
can continue their customary work with no problems, some people
choose to change jobs or reduce their hours to lighten the load on
their heart. Counselors at cardiac rehab programs may be able to
provide support and resources for those considering a job change.

Sexual activity. Most people can have sexual relations again about
3–6 weeks after a heart attack or heart procedure, as long they have
no chest pain or other complications. But since everyone recovers at
his or her own pace, your doctor may give you a stress test to deter-
mine when you can safely resume sexual activity. When you’re ready
for sex again, choose a time when you feel relaxed and rested. Wait
at least an hour after eating a full meal to allow time for digestion.
Take your time. If you have chest pain or other heart symptoms

during sexual activity, have lost interest, or are worried about having
     sex, talk with your doctor.

A special note: Couples who use medication to enhance sex should
     know that these drugs can cause irregular heartbeats. If you’ve been
     using one of these medicines or are considering taking one, ask your
     doctor whether it is safe to do so.

     Driving can usually begin within a week for most patients, if allowed by
     State law. Each State has its own regulations for driving a motor vehicle
     following a serious illness, so contact your State’s Department of Motor
     Vehicles for guidelines. People with complications or chest pain should
     not drive until their symptoms have been stable for a few weeks.

     Travel. Once your doctor tells you it’s safe for you to travel, keep
     these tips in mind:

       ¦   Keep your medications in your purse or carry-on luggage so
           they will be easily available when you need them.
       ¦   Pack light so that you can lift your luggage without strain. At
           the airport, train, or bus station, use a pull-cart to cut down on
           lifting. If possible, get help from a porter.
       ¦   Allow more time than usual to catch your flight, train, or bus.
           Who needs the extra stress?
       ¦   Walk around at least every 2 hours during trips. While sitting,
           flex your feet frequently and do other simple exercises to
           increase blood flow in your legs and prevent blood clots.
       ¦   Check with your doctor before traveling to locations at high
           altitudes (greater than 6,000 feet) or places where the temperature
           will be either very hot or very cold. When you first arrive, give
           yourself a chance to rest.

     Remember, each person’s recovery process is different. Don’t try to
     guess when you can return to normal activities. Always ask your
     doctor first.

     Coping With Your Feelings
     Anyone who has had a heart attack or has undergone heart surgery
     knows that it can be an upsetting experience. You’ve just come
     through a major health crisis, and your usual life has been disrupted.
     Afterward, it’s normal to experience a wide range of feelings.

But you may also feel worried, angry, or
     depressed. It may be reassuring to know that these reactions are
     very common, and that most difficult feelings pass within a few
     weeks. Here are some things to remember:

     Take 1 day at a time. Try not to think too much about next week
     or next month. Do what you can do today. Enjoy small pleasures:
     a walk in your neighborhood, a conversation with a loved one, a
     snuggle with a pet, or a good meal.

     Share your concerns. Talk with family members and friends about
     your feelings and concerns, and ask for support. Be sure to ask for
     the kind of support you need. (For example, if you want a sympa-
     thetic ear rather than advice, gently let your loved ones know.)
     Be sure to give family members time to say what they feel and need,
     too. Supportive relationships may actually help to lengthen life after
     a heart attack.

     Get support from “veterans.” Whether you’ve had a heart attack or
     gone through heart surgery, consider joining a support group for
     people who have shared your experience. Groups for heart patients
     can provide emotional support as well as help you develop new
     ways of handling everyday challenges. For a list of support groups
     in your local area, contact The Mended Hearts at
     www.mended.hearts.org or at 1–888–432–7899. Your local
     American Heart Association chapter may also offer support groups.

     Keep moving. Regular physical activity not only helps to reduce
     the risk of future heart problems, but also helps to relieve anxiety,
     depression, and other difficult feelings. Any regular physical activity—
     even gentle walking—can help to lift your mood.

     Seek help for depression. Up to 20 percent of heart disease patients
     battle serious depression, and many more suffer milder cases of the
     “blues.” If you find yourself feeling very sad or discouraged for
     m o re than a week or so, be sure to let your doctor know. Counseling
     and/or medication can often be very helpful. Seeking help is very
     important, not only because you deserve to enjoy life as fully as
     possible, but also because heart patients who are successfully treated
     for depression are less likely to have future serious heart problems.


How To Choose a Cardiac Rehab Program

Cardiac rehab programs vary in the types of services they offer and
     emphasize. Choose one that makes exercise training a priority.
     Studies show that people who participate in an exercise-based
     program are less likely to have a future heart attack or major heart
     surgery, and are less apt to die of any heart-related cause than those
     who don’t join a program that emphasizes exercise. When choosing
     a cardiac rehab program, also look for one that:

       ¦   Offers a wide range of services, including education and
           counseling.
       ¦   Offers services at a time and place that are convenient for you.
       ¦   Offers services that meet your specific needs and preferences.
           For example, if you’re overweight, look for a plan that provides
           help for weight loss.
       ¦   Is supervised by a team of health care professionals.
       ¦   Is affordable. Your insurance may cover the cost of some
           cardiac rehab services, but not others. Find out what will be
           covered and for how long, so you’ll know from the start what
           your out-of-pocket costs will be.

     What You’ll Do in a Cardiac Rehab Program
     Get moving. E x e rcise training will help you learn to safely participate
     in physical activity, strengthen your muscles, and improve your
     stamina. If you’ve recently gotten out of the hospital, you may be
     worried that exercise will bring on another heart attack or other
     heart crisis. In fact, physical activity can help prevent future heart
     problems. Your rehab team will help you develop a program that is
     safe and effective for you.

     Some programs make use of equipment such as a treadmill for
     walking, stationary bikes, and light weights, and you’ll be shown
     how to use this equipment to get the most benefit. Other programs
     offer low-impact aerobics classes and other group exercise activities.
     In most programs, your heart rate and blood pressure will be moni-
     tored while you move. As your heart and body become stronger,
     you will gradually increase your physical activity. Eventually, after
     you become familiar with the program, you can continue it at a
     fitness center or at home.

Learn new heart healthy habits. In your cardiac rehab program,
you’ll also learn about controlling your personal risk factors for heart
attack and other heart complications, and how to create new, healthier
habits. Controlling risk factors is a very important part of your re c o v-
ery process. Depending on your personal needs, you may learn to:

   ¦   Quit smoking if you’re a smoker.
   ¦   Manage related health conditions such as diabetes and high
       blood pressure.
   ¦   Eat a healthy, low-saturated fat, low-cholesterol diet.
   ¦   Control your weight.
   ¦   Manage stress.

For more information on controlling risk factors, see the sections of
this guidebook on “Major Risk Factors” and “What Else Affects
Heart Disease?” on pages 13 and 31 respectively.

Get counseling and sup-
port. A good cardiac
rehab program will help
you learn to cope with
the challenges of adjust-
ing to a new lifestyle,
as well as address any
concerns you may
have about the future.
You’ll also be offered
help in dealing with the
emotional ups and downs
that many people experi-
ence following a heart
attack or heart surgery.
Many programs offer
classes in stress man-
agement, as well
individual counseling,
group support, or
both.

Cardiac Rehabilitation

Your doctor may recommend cardiac rehabilitation (rehab) to help
you recover from a heart attack or heart surgery. This is a total
program for heart health that includes exercise training, education
on heart healthy living, and counseling to reduce stress and help you
return to an active life.

Getting involved in a cardiac rehab program is an excellent idea.
A recent study showed that people who participated in cardiac
rehab were 50 percent more likely to survive 3 years after a heart
attack than those who didn’t participate. Cardiac rehab can help to
strengthen your heart, reduce the risks of a future heart attack, and
return you as quickly as possible to your normal daily activities.
Almost everyone with heart disease can benefit from some kind of
cardiac rehabilitation. No one is too old or too young to benefit.
Women are helped by cardiac rehab as much as men are.

Getting Started
Cardiac rehab often begins in the hospital after a heart attack or
heart surgery, with very gentle physical activity and counseling on
adjusting to life at home. Once you leave the hospital, you can
continue to participate in cardiac rehab on an outpatient basis.
Outpatient programs may be located at your hospital, in a medical
center, or in a community facility such as a YMCA. Some people
continue cardiac rehabilitation at home. Regardless of the location,
your cardiac rehab team—which may include doctors, nurses,
exercise specialists, dietitians and counselors—will help you to
create a safe exercise plan, as well as provide information and
encouragement to control your risk factors.

You will need your doctor’s approval to get started in cardiac rehab.
But not all doctors bring up the topic with their heart patients, espe-
cially women. Research indicates that women are only about half as
likely as men to participate in cardiac rehab programs. This is wor-
risome, because nonparticipation increases the risk of having second
and often fatal heart attacks. So be sure to tell your doctor or nurse
that you’re interested in cardiac rehabilitation. Talk with them
about your specific needs and preferences, and ask for a referral that
is a good fit for you.

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Blood Pressure: How High Is High?

Blood Pressure:
   How High Is High?

Your blood pressure category is determined by the higher number
   of either your systolic or your diastolic measurement. For example,
   if your systolic number is 115 but your diastolic number is 85, your
   category is prehypertension.

                                             Systolic                             Diastolic
   Normal blood pressure        Less than 120     and    Less than 80

   Prehypertension                  120–139           or         80–89

   High blood pressure          140 or higher     or     90 or higher




Blood Pressure
But you can take action to control high blood pressure, and thereby
avoid many life-threatening disorders.

Your health care provider should check your blood pressure on
several different days before deciding whether it is too high. Blood
pressure is considered high when it stays at or above 140/90 over a
period of time. However, if you have diabetes, it is important to
keep your blood pressure below 130/80.

For those with heart disease, it is especially important to control
blood pressure to reduce the risks of stroke and heart attack. Even
if you don’t have high blood pressure, it is important to avoid
developing prehypertension, a condition that increases your risk
for high blood pressure.

Be aware, too, that a high systolic blood pressure level (first number)
     is dangerous. If your systolic blood pressure is 140 or higher (or
     130 or higher if you have diabetes), you are more likely to develop
     heart disease complications and other problems even if your
     diastolic blood pressure (second number) is in the normal range.
     High systolic blood pressure is high blood pressure. If you have this
     condition, you will need to take steps to control it. High blood
     pressure can be controlled in two ways: by changing your lifestyle
     and by taking medication.

     Changing your lifestyle. If your blood pressure is not too high, you
     may be able to control it entirely by losing weight if you are over-
     weight, getting regular physical activity, limiting the salt in your
     food, cutting down on alcohol, and changing your eating habits.
     A special eating plan called DASH can help to lower blood pressure.
     DASH stands for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension. The
     DASH eating plan emphasizes fruits, vegetables, whole-grain foods,
     and low-fat dairy products. It is rich in magnesium, potassium, cal-
     cium, protein, and fiber, but low in saturated fat, trans fat, total fat,
     and cholesterol. (Trans fat is a harmful type of dietary fat that
     forms when vegetable oil is hardened.) The diet also limits red meat,
     sweets, and sugar-containing beverages.

                                           If you follow the DASH eating
                                             plan and also consume less
                                              sodium, you are likely to
                                              reduce your blood pressure
                                              even more . Sodium is a sub-
                                             stance that affects blood pres-
                                            sure. It is the main ingredient
                                                in salt and is found in many
                                                          processed foods,
                                                              such as soups,
                                                             convenience
                                                            meals, some
                                                            breads and cere-
                                                            als, and salted
                                                              snacks. For
                                                               more on the
                                                                DASH eating


Friday, August 25, 2017

Getting Tested for Heart Disease

You may be reading this book because you think you might have heart disease but aren’t yet sure. Keep in mind that heart disease doesn’t always announce itself with symptoms. That means you could have heart disease and still feel perfectly fine. The best course is to talk with your doctor about your personal degree of heart disease risk and about whether getting tested is a good idea.

Most screening tests for heart disease are done outside of the body and are painless. After taking a careful medical history and doing a physical examination, your doctor may give you one or more of the following tests:


Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG) makes a graph of the heart’s electrical activity as it beats. This test can show abnormal heartbeats, heart muscle damage, blood flow problems in the coronary arteries, and heart enlargement.


Stress test (or treadmill test or exercise ECG) re c o rds the heart ’s electrical activity during exercise, usually on a treadmill or exercise bike. If you are unable to exercise due to arthritis or another health condition, a stress test can be done without exercise . Instead, you can take a medicine that increases blood flow to the h e a rt muscle and shows whether there are any problems in that flow.


Nuclear scan (or thallium stress test) shows the working of the heart muscle as blood flows through the heart . A small amount of radioactive material is injected into a vein, usually in the arm, and a camera records how much is taken up by the heart muscle.


Echocardiographic changes sound waves into pictures that show the heart’s size, shape, and movement. The sound waves also can be u s e d to see how much blood is pumped out by the heart when it contracts.


Coronary angiography (or angiogram or arteriography) shows an x ray of blood flow problems and blockages in the coronary arteries. A thin, flexible tube called a catheter is threaded through an artery of an arm or leg up into the heart. A dye is then injected into the tube, allowing the heart and blood vessels to be filmed as the heart pumps. The picture is called an angiogram or arteriogram.

Ventriculogram is frequently a part of the x-ray dye test described before. It is used to get a picture of the heart’s main pumping chamber, typically the left ventricle.


Intracoronary ultrasound uses a catheter that measures blood flow. It creates a picture of the coronary arteries that shows the thickness and other features of the artery wall. This lets the doctor see blood flow and any blockages.

In addition, several new, highly sensitive screening tests have been developed. Ask your doctor about these tests:

Carotid doppler ultrasound uses sound waves to detect blockages and narrowing of the carotid artery in the neck, both of which can signal an increased risk for heart attack or stroke.

Electron-beam computed tomography is a superfast scan that provides a snapshot of the calcium buildup in your coronary arteries.
















Thursday, August 24, 2017

Heart Disease A Wakeup Call

If you have heart disease, you may understandably hope that it’s only a temporary ailment, one that can be cured with medicine or surgery. But heart disease is a lifelong condition: Once you have it, you’ll always have it. It’s true that procedures such as angioplasty and bypass surgery can help blood and oxygen flow more easily through the coronary arteries that lead to the heart. But the arteries remain damaged, which means that you’re more likely to have a heart attack. It is sobering, yet important, to realize that the condition of your blood vessels will steadily worsen unless you make changes in your daily habits. Many people die of complications from heart disease, or become permanently disabled. That’s why it is so vital to take action to control this serious condition.


The good news is that you can control heart disease. There is much you can do to manage your heart condition, reduce your risk of a first or repeat heart attack, and improve your chances of living a long, rewarding life. The sooner you get started, the better your chances of avoiding further heart problems, feeling better, and staying well. So use this handbook to find out more about your own heart condition and what you can do to improve it. You have the power to make a positive difference in your heart health—and you can start making that difference today.


What Is Heart Disease?


Coronary heart disease is the main form of heart disease. It occurs when the coronary arteries, which supply blood to the heart muscle, become hardened and narrowed due to a buildup of plaque on the arteries’ inner walls. Plaque is the accumulation of cholesterol, fat, and other substances. As plaque continues to build up in the arteries, blood flow to the heart is reduced.

Coronary heart disease—often simply called heart disease—can lead to a heart attack. A heart attack happens when a cholesterol-rich plaque bursts and releases its contents into the bloodstream. This causes a blood clot to form over the plaque, totally blocking blood flow through the artery and preventing vital oxygen and nutrients from getting to the heart. A heart attack can cause permanent damage to the heart muscle.

Heart disease includes a number of other serious conditions, including: 

Angina. More than 6 million Americans live with angina, which is chest pain or discomfort that occurs when the heart muscle is not getting enough blood. The inadequate blood flow is caused by narrowed coronary arteries, due to an accumulation of plaque. A bout of angina is not a heart attack, but it means that you’re more likely to have a heart attack than someone who doesn’t have angina. There are two kinds of angina:


Stable angina has a recognizable pattern. It may feel like pressure or a squeezing pain in your chest. The pain may also occur in your shoulders, arms, neck, jaw, or back. It may also feel like indigestion. Stable angina pain is generally brought on by some kind of exertion or strain (such as climbing stairs or experiencing emotional stress), and it is usually relieved by rest or medicine.


Unstable angina is more serious than stable angina. Occurring at any time, unstable angina often reflects a change in a previously stable pattern of angina. Episodes of unstable angina are usually more f requent, painful, and longer lasting than bouts of stable angina, and a re less often relieved by rest or medicine. Unstable angina is a sign that you may have a heart attack very soon. The symptoms are the same as if you are having a heart attack. (See page 46 for heart attack warning signs.) If you have any of these symptoms, you should call 9–1–1 right away so that you can get immediate treatment.

Congestive heart failure. Congestive heart failure is a life-threatening condition in which the heart cannot pump enough blood to supply the body’s needs. Affecting nearly 5 million Americans, heart failure occurs when excess fluid collects in the body as a result of heart weakness or injury. This condition leads to a buildup of fluid in the lungs, causing swelling of the feet, tiredness, weakness, and breathing difficulties.

High blood pressure is the leading cause of congestive heart failure in the United States. Heart disease and diabetes are also major underlying causes of heart failure. People who have had a heart attack are at high risk of developing this condition.

 Arrhythmias are problems that affect the electrical system of the heart muscle, producing abnormal heart arrhythmias . Many factors can contribute to arrh y t hm i a s , including heart disease, high blood pre s s u re, diabetes , smoking, heavy alcohol use, an electrolyte imbalance, drug abuse, and stress ..

Monday, January 2, 2017

Your Help Can Change A Life.


Hi, I’m Kevin McGill and this is my story. Not long ago my life was quite normal. I had dreams and ambitions about my future and strived to make them happen. But suddenly everything changed. I was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy and triple cardiovascular disease. My whole world collapsed…
Since, I haven’t been able to work for a while, money has been short. If that wasn’t enough, my old truck died and I now have no means of transportation. Getting to and from doctor appointments and the drug store has been a real struggle, since there is no public transportation that I can use, and the closest drug store is almost an hour in walking distance.
Given the chance, I plan on buying a cheap used car that will help me visit my doctor, the drug store and the local grocery store. Due to my condition, I require constant medical attention, but don’t have a way to get there. Your invaluable support and generous donations can fill my life with hope again. If you share my belief that everyone deserves a chance to live with dignity, you can make my dream come true.


Saturday, October 15, 2016

Cardiovascular Disease & Diabetes

Cardiovascular Disease & Diabetes

The following statistics speak loud and clear that there is a strong correlation between cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes.
  • At least 68 percent of people age 65 or older with diabetes die from some form of heart disease; and 16% die of stroke.
  • Adults with diabetes are two to four times more likely to have heart disease or a stroke than adults without diabetes.
  • The American Heart Association considers diabetes to be one of the seven major controllable risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
     
Why are people with diabetes at increased risk for CVD?
Diabetes is treatable, but even when glucose levels are under control it greatly increases the risk of heart disease and stroke. That's because people with diabetes, particularly type 2 diabetes, may have the following conditions that contribute to their risk for developing cardiovascular disease.
  • High blood pressure (hypertension)
    High blood pressure has long been recognized as a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Studies report a positive association between hypertension and insulin resistance. When patients have both hypertension and diabetes, which is a common combination, their risk for cardiovascular disease doubles.
  • Abnormal cholesterol and high triglycerides
    Patients with diabetes often have unhealthy cholesterol levels including high LDL ("bad") cholesterol, low HDL ("good") cholesterol, and high triglycerides. This triad of poor lipid counts often occurs in patients with premature coronary heart disease. It is also characteristic of a lipid disorder associated with insulin resistance called atherogenic dyslipidemia, or diabetic dyslipidemia in those patients with diabetes. Learn more about cholesterol abnormalities as they relate to diabetes.
  • Obesity
    Obesity is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease and has been strongly associated with insulin resistance. Weight loss can improve cardiovascular risk, decrease insulin concentration and increase insulin sensitivity. Obesity and insulin resistance also have been associated with other risk factors, including high blood pressure.
  • Lack of physical activity
    Physical inactivity is another modifiable major risk factor for insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease. Exercising and losing weight can prevent or delay the onset of type 2 diabetes, reduce blood pressure and help reduce the risk for heart attack and stroke. It's likely that any type of moderate and/or vigorous intensity, aerobic physical activity—whether sports, household work, gardening or work-related physical activity—is similarly beneficial. For overall cardiovascular health, the American Heart Association recommends:

     – At least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity at least 5 days per week for a total of 150

    OR
    –At least 25 minutes of vigorous aerobic activity at least 3 days per week for a total of 75 minutes; or a combination of moderate-and vigorous-intensity aerobic activity

    AND

    Moderate-to high-intensity muscle-strengthening activity at least 2 days per week for additional health benefits.
     
  • Poorly controlled blood sugars (too high) or out of normal rangeDiabetes can cause blood sugar to rise to dangerous levels. Medications may be needed to manage blood sugar.
  • Smoking
    Smoking puts individuals, whether or not they have diabetes, at higher risk for heart disease and stroke. Learn how to kick the habit.
     
Individuals with insulin resistance or diabetes in combination with one or more of these risk factors are at even greater risk of heart disease or stroke. However, by managing their risk factors,  patients with diabetes may avoid or delay the development of heart and blood vessel disease. Your health care provider will do periodic testing to assess whether you have developed any of these risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease.

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

The Pains of Sleep

Ere on my bed my limbs I lay,
It hath not been my use to pray
With moving lips or bended knees;
But silently, by slow degrees,
My spirit I to Love compose,
In humble trust mine eye-lids close,
With reverential resignation
No wish conceived, no thought exprest,
Only a sense of supplication;
A sense o'er all my soul imprest
That I am weak, yet not unblest,
Since in me, round me, every where
Eternal strength and Wisdom are.

But yester-night I prayed aloud
In anguish and in agony,
Up-starting from the fiendish crowd
Of shapes and thoughts that tortured me:
A lurid light, a trampling throng,
Sense of intolerable wrong,
And whom I scorned, those only strong!
Thirst of revenge, the powerless will
Still baffled, and yet burning still!
Desire with loathing strangely mixed
On wild or hateful objects fixed.
Fantastic passions! maddening brawl!
And shame and terror over all!
Deeds to be hid which were not hid,
Which all confused I could not know
Whether I suffered, or I did:
For all seemed guilt, remorse or woe,
My own or others still the same
Life-stifling fear, soul-stifling shame.

So two nights passed: the night's dismay
Saddened and stunned the coming day.
Sleep, the wide blessing, seemed to me
Distemper's worst calamity.
The third night, when my own loud scream
Had waked me from the fiendish dream,
O'ercome with sufferings strange and wild,
I wept as I had been a child;
And having thus by tears subdued
My anguish to a milder mood,
Such punishments, I said, were due
To natures deepliest stained with sin,—
For aye entempesting anew
The unfathomable hell within,
The horror of their deeds to view,
To know and loathe, yet wish and do!
Such griefs with such men well agree,
But wherefore, wherefore fall on me?
To be loved is all I need,
And whom I love, I love indeed.

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Presenting a diverse collection of engaging media to...

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Thursday, July 14, 2016

Almost well again :) test results

Transthoracic Echocardiography Report (TTE)

Demographics

Patient MCGILL KEVIN Gender Male
Name CORTEZ

MR ****** Race Caucasian

Account  ********* Room # 0000

Corporate DOS 07/05/2016
ID

Accession # ******* Referring Physician Jerry Champ MD

DOB 08/19/1975 Sonographer Jarobvey Matthews RVT,
RDCS

Age 40 year(s) Interpreting Jerry Champ MD
Physician

Ordering Physician Jerry Champ MD

Procedure

Type of Study

TTE procedure:ECHOCARDIOGRAM WITH DOPPLER \T\ COLOR FLOW.

Procedure Date
Date: 07/05/2016 Start: 02:01 PM End: 02:33 PM

Study Location: AnMed Health Cardiovascular Diagnostics Center OP
Technical Quality: Fair visualization

Indications:Cardiomyopathy, ischemic and Shortness of breath.

Patient Status: Routine

Height: 69 inches Weight: 165 pounds BSA: 1.9 m\S\2 BMI: 24.37 kg/m\S\2

Rhythm: Normal Sinus Rhythm with occasional PVCs HR: 72 bpm BP: 118/76 mmHg

M-Mode Measurements (cm)

LVIDd: 5.81 cm LVIDs: 5.06 cm
IVSd: 0.78 cm
LVPWd: 0.78 cm AO Root Dimension: 3.2 cm
Rt. Vent. Dimension: 2.85 cm LA: 4.1 cm
LVOT: 2.3 cm

Findings

Mitral Valve
Structurally normal mitral valve. No evidence of mitral valve stenosis.
There is trivial mitral regurgitation. No valvular masses or vegetations
are seen on the mitral valve.

Aortic Valve
The aortic valve is trileaflet with no thickening and normal function.
There is no significant stenosis or regurgitation. No valvular masses or
vegetations are seen on the aortic valve.

Tricuspid Valve
Tricuspid valve is normal in appearance and function. No evidence of
tricuspid stenosis. There is trivial tricuspid regurgitation. No valvular
masses or vegetations are seen on the tricuspid valve.
Estimated RV systolic pressure is 27 mmHg.

Pulmonic Valve
The pulmonic valve was not well visualized.
No evidence of any pulmonic regurgitation.
No evidence of pulmonic valve stenosis.

Left Atrium
The left atrium is mildly dilated. No left atrial mass or thrombus is
identified.
No color flow is seen across the interatrial septum.

Left Ventricle
The left ventricle is mildly enlarged. Normal left ventricular wall
thickness. Left ventricular systolic function is moderately diminished.
Ejection fraction is estimated at 30-35%. The apex is akinetic. No
evidence of left ventricular mass or thrombus noted. No evidence of
ventricular septal defect.

Right Atrium
The right atrium is normal in size and function. No right atrial mass or
thrombus identified. No color flow is seen across the interatrial septum.

Right Ventricle
The right ventricular systolic function is normal. The right ventricular
dimensions and wall thickness are normal.

Pericardial Effusion
The pericardium is normal without pericardial effusion.

Pleural Effusion
No evidence of pleural effusion.

Vessels
Aortic root dimensions and IVC dimensions are normal.

Conclusions

Summary
MODERATE LV SYSTOLIC DYSFUNCTION WITH SEGMENTAL WALL MOTION ABNORMALITIES.
MILD LEFT ATRIAL ENLARGEMENT.
MILD LV DIASTOLIC DYSFUNCTION.
NO SIGNIFICANT VALVULAR ABNORMALITIES NOTED.

Signature

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Electronically signed by Jerry Champ MD (Interpreting
physician) on 07/05/2016 at 04:31 PM
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