• Angela Zagatina
  • Nadezhda Zhuravskaya
  • Martin Caprnda
  • Haaris A. Shiwani
  • Katarina Gazdikova
  • Luis Rodrigo
  • Peter Kruzliak
  • Dmitry Shmatov

A lot of people with coronary artery disease do not have specific symptoms, and myocardial infarction or death are the first manifestation of the disease. New accurate, non-invasive and safe screening methods are required that can assess the prognosis of patients during routine examinations performed on millions of people. The aim of this review was to discuss the current literature regarding the utility of non-invasive ultrasound imaging of the coronary artery in assessing a patient’s prognosis in daily practice. Assessment of coronary artery flow during common stress echocardiography or echocardiography can provide additive incremental prognostic information without the burden of radiation. Exercise or pharmacologic stress echocardiography tests combined with coronary flow velocity reserve assessment has advantages over stress tests based only on regional wall motion abnormalities. Scanning of main coronary arteries as an addition to routine echocardiography can reveal patients at high risk of adverse cardiac events in the near future.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages7
JournalActa Cardiologica
DOIs
StatePublished - 19 Sep 2021

    Scopus subject areas

  • Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

    Research areas

  • CFR, Coronary artery disease, coronary artery velocity, coronary Doppler, coronary flow velocity reserve, prognosis, transthoracic echo, STRESS ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, FEASIBILITY, TRANSTHORACIC DOPPLER, BLOOD-FLOW, EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION, ANTERIOR DESCENDING ARTERY, FLOW VELOCITY RESERVE, HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY, ADDITIVE PROGNOSTIC VALUE, NONINVASIVE ASSESSMENT

ID: 86043451