The study seeks to measure pulmonary transit time via contrast-echocardiography before and after exercise.
The ability to measure the amount of blood in the lungs using heart-ultrasound (echocardiography) can be useful to estimate how much fluid is in a patient's circulation, which can influence diagnosis and treatment of certain types of heart failure. In some patients, the amount of fluid is normal at rest, but can increase with activity and thus a diagnosis of heart failure can only be made after exercising. Currently, the amount of fluid is measured invasively. We have shown that echocardiography can measure the amount of fluid in the lung circulation at rest without the need for an invasive procedure. We now seek to find out if we can make a similar measurement after exercise. If successful, the need for catheter procedures may be reduced in certain types of heart failure.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
14
giving echocardiographic contrast and taking echocardiographic images before and after exercise
VHVI
Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Pulmonary Transit Time
interval required for the pulmonary blood volume to traverse the pulmonary circulation
Time frame: 3-10 seconds
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