What's your Ejection Fraction (EF)?
The proportion, or fraction, of blood pumped out of your heart
with each beat is called the ejection fraction. A normal heart pumps
out a little more than half the heart's volume of blood with each
beat. A normal EF is 55 percent or higher. Your doctor can order
simple, painless tests such as an echocardiogram that creates a
moving picture of your heart using harmless soundwaves, or a nuclear
medicine test that shows how well your heart is pumping. If your
EF is abnormally low, you may need further tests to see if you have
an abnormal heart rhythm.
Many people who have survived a heart attack can benefit from an implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD), a pacemaker-like device that treats ventricular fibrillation (VF), the deadly heart rhythm that causes sudden cardiac death. Recently, several large clinical studies were conducted to see if ICDs could prevent sudden cardiac death in people whose heart muscle - and its pumping ability - is damaged by a heart attack. People in the studies had an ejection fraction (EF) of 40 or below. In these studies, survival rates were significantly greater for people with ICDs than for people who received traditional medical care.
Do you know your EF?
If you don't, ask your doctor. It could save your life.
Ventricular fibrillation (VF) is a deadly arrhythmia. In VF, the electrical signals that trigger the heartbeat become very fast and chaotic in the lower chambers of the heart. The heart no longer can pump blood to the brain or body. Without immediate emergency help, the heart cannot recover. Sudden cardiac death is a leading cause of death in the U.S. VF is the leading cause of sudden cardiac death.
Click here to take our quiz to find out if you may be at high risk for sudden cardiac death.
|