Two-Dimensional Echocardiography (2D Echo) can give magnificent pictures of the heart, para cardiac structures, and the incredible vessels. During a standard echo, the sound waves are coordinated to the heart from a little hand-held gadget called a transducer, which sends and gets signals. Heart walls and valves reflect some portion of the sound waves back to the transducer to deliver photos of the heart. These pictures show up in high contrast and in shading on a TV screen. They’re specifically recorded on tape and uncommon paper, and investigated and translated by a cardiologist (heart authority). From the photos it is conceivable to gauge the measure of each piece of your heart, to study movement and presence of the valves and the capacity of the heart muscle.
A Doppler echo is regularly done in the meantime so as to decide how the bloodstreams in your heart. The washing or swishing sounds you hear during the test show blood moving through the valves and chambers.