• Programs and Services
  • Cedars-Sinai Women's Heart Center
  • Services
  • Adenosine Cardiac MRI
  • Arrhythmia
  • CT Angiogram
  • Cardiovascular Intervention Center
  • Carotid Intima-Media Thickness Test
  • Coronary Angiography
  • Coronary Calcium Scan
  • Coronary Reactivity Testing
  • Electrocardiogram
  • Electrophysiology Testing
  • Endothelial Function Testing
  • Exercise Stress Testing
  • External Counter Pulsation
  • Heart Watch
  • Intravascular Ultrasound
  • Pacing Echocardiography
  • Rest and Stress Echocardiogram
  • Stress Radionuclide Perfusion or Stress Test
  • Stress and Dobutamine Echocardiology
  • Tilt Table Testing
  • Transesophageal Echcardiography
 
Pacing Echocardiograms

You will be asked to swallow a very small pacing catheter about the size of a piece of spaghetti. The pacing wire sits in your esophagus (the tube that runs between your mouth and your stomach). It is able to pace the heart rate at a higher rate by delivering small electrical impulses. This makes the heart pump at a higher rate, as if you were exercising. Once your target heart rate has been reached, the sonographer will take echocardiographic pictures of your heart to see how you respond to exercise.

The For Patients section has instructions for preparing for pacing echocardiography.

 
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