Transthoracic echocardiogram
A transthoracic echocardiogram is the most common type of echocardiogram, which is a still or moving image of the internal parts of the heart using ultrasound. In this case, the probe is placed on the chest or abdomen of the subject to get various views of the heart. It is used as a non-invasive assessment of the overall health of the heart, including a patient's heart valves and degree of heart muscle contraction. The images are displayed on a monitor for real-time viewing and then recorded.
Details
A TTE is a clinical tool to evaluate the structure and function of the heart. All four chambers and all four valves can be assessed by TTE, but the quality and visibility of these structures varies from person to person. Other structures visible on TTE include the aorta, the pericardium, pleural effusions, ascites, and inferior vena cava. It can be used to detect a heart attack, enlargement/hypertrophy of the heart and infiltration of the heart from an abnormal substance. Weakness of the heart, cardiac tumors and a variety of other findings can be diagnosed with a TTE. With advanced measurements of the movement of the tissue with time, it can measure diastolic function, fluid status, and ventricular dyssynchrony.TTE in adults is also of limited use for the structures at the back of the heart, such as the left atrial appendage. Transesophageal echocardiography may be more accurate than TTE because it excludes the variables previously mentioned and allows closer visualization of common sites for vegetations and other abnormalities. Transesophageal Echocardiography also affords better visualization of prosthetic heart valves and clots within the four chambers of the heart. This type of Echocardiogram may be a better option for patients with thick chests, abnormal chest walls, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and the obese.
"Bubble contrast TTE" involves the injection of agitated saline into a vein, followed by an Echocardiographic study. The bubbles are initially detected in the right atrium and right ventricle. If bubbles appear in the left heart, this may indicate a shunt, such as a patent foramen ovale, atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect or arteriovenous malformations in the lungs.
If your doctor deems it necessary, a stress TTE may be performed. This can be accomplished by either exercising on a bike or treadmill, or by medicine given through an IV along with a contrast agent to make your bodily fluids show up brighter. This allows a comparison between your heart at rest and your heart when it is beating at a faster rate.
There are some risks associated when having an echocardiogram performed. It is possible that the images will not show up clearly enough, which can cause a misdiagnosis.
Indications
There are numerous indications for a TTE:- Non-specific symptoms if cardiac etiology is suspected:
- * Fatigue
- * Dyspnea
- Heart failure
- Heart murmur or known valve disease
- Chemotherapy
- Chest pain for evaluation of wall motion abnormalities
- Congenital heart disease
- Endocarditis
- Hypoxemia for shunt evaluation
Examination
Limited studies can be done as a follow up exam to a full study, or can be done as "point of care" to answer specific questions in the appropriate setting. For example, critically ill patients often have "bedside ultrasounds" performed to assess particular questions the treating team has about their status. This could be looking for cardiac tamponade and acute valve regurgitation. Often, this may include examination of other organ systems such as lungs for effusions or the focused assessment with sonography for trauma.
Interpretation of the exam can be done by anyone trained in reading echocardiograms. However, this is often limited to cardiologists for "formal reading" of these studies. Anesthesiologists can perform intra-operative TEE's during surgical cases and they interpret their own studies. Anyone performing a bedside or "point of care" echocardiogram is expected to interpret their own study as it is performed. Pocket-sized TTE devices are growing in popularity.
Limitations
TTE is inherently limited in what it is capable of doing. Notably, it must be used through the skin, and ultrasound waves must go through skin and soft tissue before reaching the heart. This is in contrast to transesophageal echo in which the probe is directly behind the left atrium in the esophagus and has far less tissue to penetrate, which means images from TEE are far superior in quality. Extremes in body sizes limit the acoustic windows and degrade the image quality of TTE's.TTE is also limited in its views of structures. Being a surface modality, the structures closest to the skin are better visualized than those deeper to the skin. A common example that demonstrates this is the visibility of the left atrial appendage. This structure is known to form clots in atrial fibrillation and the LAA is rarely seen on TTE but readily seen on TEE. Cardioversion of atrial fibrillation in someone not on anticoagulation would require TEE to best visualize the LAA to rule out a thrombus.
Like all of the kinds of echocardiography, TTE is limited to structure and function. It is not, for example, able to determine perfusion of the myocardium, which would require a metabolic imaging modality such as PET or SPECT stress testing. Perfusion can be inferred based on wall motion, however.
Modalities
2D echo
This is the most common modality used today. A 2-dimensional plane is formed by sweeping the ultrasound waves to obtain an image that varies with angle and depth. Evaluation of the structures is done in this view.M-mode
This modality is obtained at a single angle and then plotted against time to obtain an image. It can be used to watch the movement of structures with timeDoppler
Color doppler
Color doppler is a form of 2D echo in which the doppler shift of the structures is shown as color. Typically, this is shown as red and blue with red indicating movement toward the transducer and blue indicating movement away from the transducer. This can be used to show blood flow through the valves to visually indicate the direction of blood flow. Abnormal blood flow can reflect stenosis and regurgitation of the valve. Color doppler can also show blood flow in abnormal locations such as with septal defects.Color doppler can also be applied to M-mode. Using color doppler in this way gives better visualization of the changes in flow with time due to the higher frame rate with M-mode.
Spectral doppler
Spectral doppler is presented similarly to M-mode in which the doppler information is plotted as a spectrogram. This can be both "continuous" and "pulse" wave where the former shows the spectrum along a specific line and the latter shows within a small window along that line. Continuous wave is better at showing maximal velocities and pulse wave is better for showing flow through a small volume.Spectral doppler is often used for quantification of flow. For example, the aortic valve area can be estimated using the continuity equation by measuring the velocity time integral of the aortic valve & LV outflow tract; the VTI is calculated by tracing the flow on the spectral doppler curve. Spectral doppler is also useful for calculating the maximum flow and mean flow through a valve.
Tissue doppler
Tissue doppler can be used to determine motion of myocardial tissue. This can be used to measure motion of the septal and lateral mitral annulus to suggest diastolic heart failure.Axes
The images obtained with echocardiography are in reference to the heart itself. Two key axes of the heart are the long axis and short axis. The long axis is an imaginary line from the apex of the heart through the center of the mitral valve. The short axis is perpendicular to the long axis and shows the heart in cross section.Windows
Evaluation of the heart with echocardiography requires having "acoustic windows" of the heart. Bone reflects the ultrasound waves and so all structures directly behind bone are not visible with ultrasound. This requires that the heart be viewed between bones and, in particular, between ribs. The most common views are the parasternal, apical, subcostal, and suprasternal windows..- Parasternal: adjacent to the sternum. Without qualification, this means the left side of the heart but right parasternal views can be attempted.
- Apical: at the apex of the heart.
- Subcostal: below the sternum at the top of the abdomen
- Suprasternal: above the sternal at the base of the neck.
Views
Parasternal long axis (PLAX)
This view is obtained to the left of the sternum and views the heart in its long axis. In this view, the mitral valve, aortic valve, right ventricular outflow tract, base of the left ventricle, and the left atrium can be visible. Angulation in this view can bring the right ventricular inflow tract and tricuspid valve into view, and angulation the opposite way can bring the pulmonary valve into view.In this view, it is possible to appreciate the long-axis cross section of the mitral and aortic valves. The classic "hockey stick" shape of rheumatic mitral stenosis can be appreciated in this view. However, the angle of the probe with these valves can lead to under-appreciation of valve dysfunction.
The parasternal long view of the pulmonary valve is the only view of the posterior leaflet.
Structures visible:
- Anterior septal and inferior lateral walls of the left ventricle
- Left atrium
- Mitral valve in long-axis with chordae
- Aortic valve in long-axis
- Tricuspid valve in long-axis and right ventricular inflow tract
- Pulmonary valve in long-axis and right ventricular outflow tract
- Left ventricular size and wall thickness
- Left atrial linear dimension
- Left ventricular outflow tract diameter
- Aortic annulus, sinus of Valsalva, and aortic root sizes
- Color doppler of all four valves
- Spectral doppler of tricuspid and pulmonary valves
Parasternal short axis (PSAX)
The standard PSAX view is at the level of the aortic valve, but moving the probe along the long-axis can review the LV outflow tract, LV at the base, and LV at the midsection.
Structures visible:
- Aortic valve in short-axis
- * Aortic valve dysfunction, aortic sclerosis/stenosis
- Tricuspid valve in long-axis
- Pulmonary valve in long-axis
- Right ventricle, including inflow and outflow tracts
- Left ventricle in short-axis
- * Closer to the base can reveal the left ventricular outflow tract
- * At the level of the base can show the movement of the mitral valve leaflets in short-axis
- * At the level of mid-LV can show papillary muscles
- Aortic valve area by planimetry
- Color doppler of all four valves
- Spectral doppler of tricuspid and pulmonary valves
Apical four chamber (A4C)
Structures:
- Inferior septum and anterior lateral segments of the left ventricle
- Right ventricle
- Left atrium
- Right atrium
- Mitral valve
- Tricuspid valve
- RV size and function; TAPSE
- Left atrial size
- Right atrial size
- Mitral valve flow is best seen in this view and has the best angle with probe to estimate flows
- Tricuspid valve flow
- Tissue doppler at the mitral valve annulus for diastolic function
- Agitated saline bubble study for right to left shunting
- With contrast, apical and mural LV thrombi can be easily seen
Apical three chamber (A3C)
Structures:
- Aortic valve
- Mitral valve
- Left ventricle
- Left atrium
- Left ventricular outflow tract volume-time integral to be used in conjunction with aortic valve VTI for aortic valve area and stenosis
- Mitral valve flow
Apical two chamber (A2C)
Structures:
- Anterior and inferior segments of the left ventricle
- Mitral valve in long-axis
- Left atrium
- Mitral valve flow
- Spectral doppler of the mitral valve
Subcostal
Other non-cardiac structures are visible in this view and some pathologies — such as ascites — can be observed.
Suprasternal (SSN)
This view is obtained above the sternum in the suprasternal notch. In this view, the aortic arch and portion of the descending aorta can be seen. Color and spectral doppler through the descending aorta can show signs of coarctation of the aorta.Structures
Examples of TTE views of various structures of the heart.Aortic valve
Mitral valve
Tricuspid valve
Pulmonary valve
Measurements
Routine TTE exams can provide a significant wealth of information about the heart's structure and function:- Left ventricular size, thickness, systolic function, and diastolic function
- Right ventricular size and systolic function
- Aortic valve
- * Aortic valve sclerosis & stenosis
- * Aortic valve insufficiency
- Mitral valve
- * Mitral stenosis
- * Mitral regurgitation
- Tricuspid valve
- * Tricuspid regurgitation
- Pulmonary valve
- * Pulmonary regurgitation
- Inferior vena cava size as estimate of central venous pressure
- Aortic root size for thoracic ascending aortic aneurysm
- Pericardial effusion size
Echo societies have published normal ranges for various features of the heart on various views to promote TTE as a quantifiable assessment of the heart.
Equations
Quantitative echo utilizes a number of equations to calculate aspects of the heart structure and function. Simplified Bernoulli equation and continuity equation are two common equations used. Others are used in grading valve function.Diseases
TTE can be useful for diagnosing many cardiac diseases.- Cardiomyopathy: dilated, restrictive, and hypertrophic
- Pulmonary hypertension
- Septal defects including ASD & VSD
- Stenosis and regurgitation/insufficiency of valves
- Structure and function of prosthetic valves
- Thoracic ascending aortic aneurysm
- Infiltrative diseases such as amyloidosis
- Cardiac tamponade
- Evaluation of congenital diseases
- Pulmonary embolism
- Endocarditis