In episode 3 of LV systolic function, Dr Emma Bowcock and Dr Chris Duncan delve into all things ejection fraction. When is it good? When it’s it bad? What are the caveats in the ICU.
Пікірлер: 5
@anonemecho2 жыл бұрын
Look forward to the cases as a wrap up.
@nsas955Ай бұрын
Really you both are great teachers. Many many thanks and greetings from Lebanon. Meanwhile can you provide us a discussion about how to do contrast echo. Thanks again.
@georginamensah6159 Жыл бұрын
Awesome presentation
@wailwinshein898 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for that awesome presentation. Could you explain more detail about discordence between LVEF and CO, please? Hoping your answer.
@chrisfduncan Жыл бұрын
Hey :) EF and functional SV/CO are different entities - can have low EF with an adequate forward SV (think the dilated cardiomyopathy population walking around in the community) or a high EF with a low SV (e.g. hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with a small LV end diastolic volume). The difference is potentially even more marked and dynamic in critical care. Very high EF in septic shock not necessarily good (increased risk of septic cardiomyopathy). Slightly low EF *might* be protective. High EF might also indicate another problem in shocked patient - e.g. acute severe MR (can be v difficult to see) or VSD. In other words - EF looks great, but all the flow is going backwards. Hence - contextualise EF with cardiac output measurements for full picture. Hope that helps.