Exams and Tests
Emergency evaluation for a heart attack
After you
call 911 for a
heart attack, paramedics will quickly assess your
heart rate, blood pressure, and breathing rate and place electrodes on your
chest for an
electrocardiogram (EKG, ECG). An electrocardiogram is
a graphic record
of the heart's electrical activity as it contracts and relaxes.
The ECG's jagged-line image appears on a portable monitor. And in some areas
this image can be transmitted to the hospital emergency room so a doctor there
can assess your condition before you arrive.
When you arrive at
the hospital, the emergency room doctor will take your history and perform a
physical exam, and a more complete ECG will be done. An ECG can detect signs of
insufficient blood flow, heart muscle damage, abnormal heartbeats, and other
heart problems. A technician will draw blood to test for
cardiac enzymes, which are released into the
bloodstream when heart cells die. The presence of the protein troponin in the
blood usually means that there has been heart damage.
Results of
these tests are usually available quickly. If your tests show that you are at
risk of having or are having a
heart attack, your doctor will probably recommend that
you have
cardiac catheterization. During a cardiac
catheterization, a fine tube (called a catheter) is threaded through an artery
in your arm or leg and up into the heart. Then a dye that contains iodine is
injected, which makes the coronary arteries visible on a digital X-ray screen.
The doctor can then see whether your coronary arteries are blocked and how your
heart functions.
If an artery appears blocked,
angioplasty with stent placement, a procedure to open
up clogged arteries, may be done during the catheterization, or you will be
referred to a cardiovascular surgeon for
coronary artery bypass graft surgery.
If your tests
do not clearly indicate a heart attack or unstable
angina and you do not have other high-risk indicators (such as a previous heart
attack), you will probably have other tests, such as a myocardial perfusion
scan, also called single photon emission computed tomography or
SPECT imaging. SPECT is a noninvasive imaging scan that is often done while
you are in the emergency department to help determine whether you are at risk
of heart attack.
If your SPECT
test is abnormal, you are considered at high risk and may need cardiac
catheterization.
If your tests do not indicate a heart attack but
your doctor thinks you have unstable angina and may be in danger of having a
heart attack, you will be admitted to the hospital.
Testing after a heart attack
From 2 to 3 days
after a heart attack or after being admitted to the hospital for unstable
angina, you may have more tests to assess how well your heart is working and to
find out whether undamaged areas of the heart are still receiving adequate
blood flow.
These tests may include:
- Echocardiogram (echo). An echo is an
ultrasound exam used to evaluate the size, thickness, shape, and movement of
the heart muscle. It also evaluates blood flow,
ejection fraction, and the heart valves.
- Stress electrocardiogram (such as
treadmill testing). A stress test compares your ECG while you are at rest to
your ECG after your heart has been stressed, either through physical exercise
(treadmill or bike) or by using a medicine. A stress test can detect ischemia,
which is reduced blood flow to the heart muscle.
- Stress echocardiogram. A stress
echocardiogram can show whether you may have reduced blood flow to the
heart.
- Cardiac perfusion scan. A thallium scan
or technetium scan (also called a sestamibi scan) is a test used to estimate
the amount of blood reaching the heart muscle during rest and exercise.
- Angiogram. In this test, a dye
(contrast material) is injected into the coronary arteries to evaluate your
heart and coronary arteries.
- Cardiac blood pool scan. This test shows how well your heart is pumping blood to the rest
of your body.
- Cholesterol test. This test shows the
amounts of cholesterol in your blood.