Echocardiography serves as the first-line imaging technique for heart valve disease, while cardiac magnetic resonance and computed tomography provide complementary information for risk assessment.
This review summarizes current evidence to inform appropriateness criteria for multimodality imaging in adult heart valve disease.
Heart valve disease is common and a major indication for imaging. Echocardiography is the first-line imaging technique for diagnosis, assessment, and serial surveillance. However, other modalities, notably cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and computerized tomography, are used if echocardiographic imaging is suboptimal or to obtain complementary information, particularly to aid risk assessment in individual patients. This review is a summary of current evidence for state-of-the-art clinical practice to inform appropriateness criteria for heart valve disease. It is divided according to common clinical scenarios: detection of valve disease, assessment of the valve and other cardiac structures, risk assessment, screening, and intervention.
Chambers et al. (Sat,) conducted a review in Heart valve disease. Cardiovascular imaging (echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance, computerized tomography) was evaluated. Echocardiography serves as the first-line imaging technique for heart valve disease, while cardiac magnetic resonance and computed tomography provide complementary information for risk assessment.
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