Strong Heart and Vascular Center
Diagnosis
Non-Invasive Tests
Nuclear Cardiology Test
Like
a stress echo test, nuclear cardiology
studies produce images of the heart at work (during exercise)
and at rest. During a test, you are given an injection of a small
dose of a harmless radioactive tracer. Then you spend time exercising
on a treadmill or stationary bicycle and then resting. A specialized
camera (called a "gamma camera") detects the tracer
as it passes through the chambers of your heart, creating the
pictures. The pictures may reveal problems in heart muscle and
blood vessels, especially when the images of the heart at work
and at rest are compared.
The main type of nuclear cardiology test is callled a Ventricular Function Test.


