Local Cardiologist Provides Advice On Cardiac Stress Tests
Local Cardiologist Provides Advice On Cardiac Stress Tests
DANBURY â Stress testing has been a valuable tool in helping cardiologists evaluate the heart for 40 years. It is an extremely effective way of measuring how well the heart works when it is beating fast and working hard.
âWhen the heart pumps fast it requires more blood flow to it,â explained Dr Jonathan Alexander, cardiologist, Western Connecticut Medical Group. âIt helps us see if the heart is getting enough blood during these times.â
A stress test is sometimes called âexercise testâ or a âtreadmill test,â although other modalities are equally effective at stressing the heart. Evaluation of the electrocardiogram that records the patientsâ electrical activity is a key part of a stress test.
Dr Alexander offered the following insights regarding two of the most important reasons why doctors order stress tests:
*To see if patients have had a heart attack or if they are at risk of having one, look for other heart conditions or follow a known heart condition, help figure out why they might have chest pain, trouble breathing, dizziness, palpitations and a fast heart rate, or other potential cardiac symptoms
*To check out how healthy oneâs heart is before having surgery and check out how well heart medicines or other heart treatments are working.
According to Dr Alexander, doctors usually order stress tests to check for problems that can happen when the heart works hard. For instance, a doctor might order a stress test to:
*See if you have coronary artery disease, heart failure, arrhythmias, or another heart condition. Coronary heart disease is a condition that puts you at risk for a heart attack and other types of heart disease and a stress test is a very effective way of checking for this. Some people have symptoms of coronary artery disease only when they exercise. Heart failure is a condition which the heart does not pump well typically during exercise.
*Check out how your heart works after heart surgery. Often it is used prior to prescribing an exercise program or prior to enrolling in a formal cardiac rehabilitation program. It can help figure why you have chest pain, breathing difficulties, or other symptoms and see if you can safely exercise after a heart attack.â
âDoctors typically order stress tests for diagnosis,â said Dr Alexander, âbut they are also extremely useful for following known heart conditions and your doctor may want you to have one every one to two years.â
Inducing Cardiac Stress
Frequently, patients are not able to exercise because of other conditions such as back pain or other orthopedic difficulty as well as problems with blood flow to the legs. In these cases, using a medicine to âstressâ the heart can be equally effective as regular exercise.
âMany times, because the electrocardiogram is not helpful, doctors use another modality in conjunction with the stress test to help diagnose heart disease,â said Dr Alexander. âThese could include nuclear medicine techniques â using an isotope to look at blood flow â or echocardiogram to look at how well the heart muscle functions under conditions of stress. This is often referred to as an exercise echocardiogram or in the case of the nuclear tests, a cardiolite stress test or thallium stress test.â
According to Dr Alexander, for a stress test the doctor, nurse or technician will first do an electrocardiogram and measure your blood pressure. Then either he or she will âstressâ your heart and increase your heart rate by doing one of the following things:
*Have you run or walk on a treadmill
*Have you pedal a stationary bike (a bike that doesnât move except for the pedals)
*Give you a medicine to make your heart beat faster â people that canât run or walk get a medicine instead of exercising as mentioned before.
âDuring a stress test the doctor or nurse will watch you,â said Dr Alexander. âHe or she will check your blood pressure, do several electrocardiograms, and most importantly ask you how you feel. The test will end when you canât exercise any longer or when the doctor or the nurse tells you that the test is over.â
The âdownsidesâ of exercise stress testing, he said, are very few, although some people get a mild rash where the patches are placed.
âWhen people exercise and the heart rate pumps faster they can have symptoms such as an abnormal heartbeat, breathing difficulty, or feeling dizzy/faint,â said Dr Alexander. âThe medicines used during the stress test can also have side effects including headaches, dizziness, or nausea. In the vast majority of cases patients tolerate the stress test extremely well and can return to normal activities/work shortly afterward.â
For more information regarding cardiac programs and services provided by the Western Connecticut Medical Group, go to DanburyHospital.org/WesternConnecticutMedicalGroup. To learn more about cardiovascular care at Western Connecticut Health Network, call 800-516-4743.