5 Echocardiographic Red Flags You Should Never Ignore Important findings even with a normal ejection fraction Ejection fraction (EF) is often overemphasized in echocardiography. A normal EF does not exclude significant cardiac pathology. Several echocardiographic abnormalities indicate high risk disease despite preserved systolic function and must never be ignored. Below are five critical echocardiographic red flags every clinician should actively look for. 1. Reduced Global Longitudinal Strain (GLS) Global longitudinal strain assesses myocardial deformation and detects subtle systolic dysfunction earlier than EF. Key points • Normal GLS is around −18% to −22% • GLS less negative than −18% is abnormal • Indicates early myocardial dysfunction despite preserved EF Clinical significance Reduced GLS is commonly seen in hypertensive heart disease, diabetic cardiomyopathy, early ischemic heart disease, cardiotoxicity from chemotherapy, and infiltrative cardiomyopathies such as amyloidosis. I...
Dr. Usman's Cardiology Notes
Cardiology Notes: Clinical Cases including ECG, Echocardiography, Cath, and MOCK Exams to sharpen your cardiology data interpretation skills. Healthcare is stressful!!! Learning cardiology shouldn't be !!!