W. F. ARMSTRONG While stress echocardiography is not the first technique to be applied to patients for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease, it represents an impor- tant clinical tool, likely to become of increasing pertinence in today's era of cost containment and mandated cost-effectiveness of diagnosis. It may be the most rapidly expanding area of clinical echocardiography today. Stress echocardiography as we know it today represents the natural con- clusion and merger of observations made over fifty years ago. In 1935 Tenn- ant and Wiggers demonstrated that the immediate result of a coronary oc- clusion, was an instantaneous abnormality of wall motion [1]. As viewed from the surface of the heart in an open chest dog preparation, cyanosis and obvious paradoxical bulging of the left ventricular wall was noted. At a similar time Masters and co-workers, using fairly rudimentary exercise de- vices, described the response of the human cardiovascular system to sustained exercise (Figure 1) [2]. These two observations diverged for four decades while clinical investigation was pursued along the two parallel lines.
ISBN: | 9789401043359 |
Publication date: | 20th October 2012 |
Author: | Thomas H Marwick |
Publisher: | Springer an imprint of Springer Netherlands |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 182 pages |
Series: | Developments in Cardiovascular Medicine |
Genres: |
Cardiovascular medicine Acoustic and sound engineering |