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CARDIAC IMAGING
Echocardiography

When Texas Children’s Heart Center wanted to design the best echocardiogram reading room on Earth, it formed a partnership with an organization whose projects are frequently out of this world – NASA.

Often called “mission control” by its staff, the Heart Center's echo reading room is quiet, dark and intense. Its walls are lined with television monitors – just like NASA’s mission control – but instead of flight paths, the images on the screen are children’s beating hearts.

Cardiac imaging, or echocardiography, is essential in treating heart disease.

"Here we performed more than 19,000 echocardiograms last year," said Dr. Nancy Ayres, director of the Texas Children's Echocardiography Lab. “An echocardiogram can determine if there is a cardiac defect. Then, once a child is determined to have a heart problem, an echocardiogram can track how the heart problem is changing with the child’s growth.” 

Echocardiogram Types
There are three types of echocardiograms, or procedures using ultrasound technology to provide pictures of the heart: 

  • Transthoracic echocardiogram, a non-invasive test that allows the doctor to see how the heart’s chambers and valves are formed and working. 

  • Transesophagel echocardiogram, which passes a long tube bearing a tiny ultrasound camera through the mouth into the esophagus.

  • Fetal echocardiogram, for expectant parents with a family history of heart disease, fetal echocardiograms are performed on the unborn child.

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