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Columbia Presbyterian Center
Contact: Kathleen
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Department of Public Affairs
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COLUMBIA PRESBYTERIAN CARDIOLOGIST IS FIRST IN NEW YORK STATE
TO RECEIVE ACCREDITATION FOR STRESS ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
Echocardiography Is Increasingly Important in Evaluating Cardiac
Function, Especially in Women
NEW YORK, NY, November 4, 1999--Benjamin H. Lewis, MD, of the Columbia
Presbyterian Center of New York-Presbyterian Hospital, has become the first
cardiologist in New York State to receive accreditation from the Intersocietal
Commission of Accreditation of Echocardiography Laboratories (ICAEL) for
stress echocardiography, a noninvasive method of diagnosing cardiac disease.
Reflecting Columbia Presbyterian's leadership in cardiac care and diagnosis,
Dr. Lewis' accreditation places him among an elite membership to have been
granted such status in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico. While
echocardiography is increasingly seen as an invaluable addition to the
cardiac diagnostic armamentarium because of its accuracy, its results are
dependent on the technical skill of the sonographer performing the test
and on the expertise of the physician interpreting it. The test has
become one of the standard diagnostic cardiac tools, with approximately
10 million performed each year in the United States.
Echocardiography yields very clear pictures of both healthy and diseased
cardiac muscle by bouncing inaudible, high-frequency sound waves off the
heart tissue. Cardiac structure and flow information provided by
this technique can be invaluable in diagnosing heart disease. In addition
to being painless and noninvasive, the procedure produces immediate results,
in contrast to nuclear imaging technologies, whose results must be developed
and analyzed.
According to Dr. Lewis, who is an Assistant Attending Physician at the
Columbia Presbyterian Center of New York Presbyterian Hospital and Assistant
Professor of Clinical Medicine at Columbia University's College of Physicians
and Surgeons, studies have demonstrated that echocardiography rivals nuclear-based
methods in eliciting vital information about cardiac function.
"Just as important as the quick and easy, high-quality information we
can obtain from echocardiography is the fact that this technique has been
found to be particularly useful in diagnosing cardiac disease in women.
In the past, women were traditionally regarded, both by many physicians
and by women themselves, as unlikely to have heart attacks. Others
who recognized that women were vulnerable to heart attacks thought that
they could be diagnosed and treated the same way as men. As a result,
women have been underdiagnosed, or diagnosed only after they have already
had a heart attack, or undertreated. Fortunately, we are increasingly
aware that there are differences in both the diagnosis and the manifestation
of cardiac disease in the sexes, and now we are able to do something about
it," notes Dr. Lewis. He adds that the use of echocardiography is particularly
important as a diagnostic tool for women suspected of having cardiac disease
and represents an important step in bringing state-of-the-art cardiac care
to women.
Traditionally, the treadmill EKG stress test has been used as the gold
standard for diagnosing heart disease in both men and women. However,
while this test effectively diagnoses cardiac malfunction in most men,
it may produce false positive readings in women up to 30 percent of the
time. Studies have shown that echocardiography is an extremely effective
and accurate method of diagnosing women and men with heart disease.
Unlike nuclear based diagnostic tests, echocardiography involves no exposure
to radiation. Furthermore, in nuclear-based diagnostic techniques, a true
picture of cardiac function is not always achieved because of the shadows
produced by breast tissue, and intravenous injections are required.
"The tremendous diagnostic advantages of echocardiography are being
recognized. It's time-effective, cost-effective, and noninvasive, and it
gives us an immediate, comprehensive view of cardiac function. It's an
invaluable test for women. Its use may greatly help to close the
gender gap in diagnosing cardiac disease," concludes Dr. Lewis.
The ICAEL was established with the support of the American Society of
Echocardiography, the American College of Cardiology, and the Society of
Pediatric Echocardiography to provide a peer-review mechanism to encourage
and recognize the provision of quality echocardiographic diagnostic evaluations
by a process of voluntary accreditation.
© 1999 New York Presbyterian
Hospital
Weill Medical College of Cornell
University
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