Loading Shopping Cart Items...
Price Reduction!! Limited Copies available!!
PLEASE NOTICE: This is a DVD product. A shipping and handling fee will be added to your shopping cart at check-out.
This "Best of" valve lecture series includes a comprehensive overview of the latest in diagnostic evaluation and quantification of regurgitant and stenotic lesions as well as detailed discussions on the role of echocardiography in today's surgical and catheter-based interventions. Logically presented, this series leads off with a review of the "the basics," including the fundamentals in assessment and quantification of valvular disease by echocardiography. As you progress through the lecture series you will be guided through a methodical and more in-depth approach for assessing highly complex structural disease. From there, you will learn how to quantify regurgitant and stenotic lesions utilizing the latest state-of-the-art methods and the current published standards in echocardiography.
Price Reduction!! Limited Copies available!!
Each lecture provides multiple case studies which enable you to understand the clinical relevance and methods used for evaluation. Many technical tips and recommendations will be discussed as well as the most commonly identified pitfalls associated with quantification and data acquisition. This series will also review the latest guidelines for classification of disease severity and provide insight into mapping out the most appropriate course of action in management and treatment of valvular regurgitation and stenosis.
As an added bonus, an overview of pre and post-deployment evaluation by echocardiography for the newer interventional procedures is covered. And finally, this series concludes with the discussion of what the future holds for trans catheter heart valves by taking a look at a wide range topics including: evolving valve size and structure, improvement of devices and flexibility, expansion of inclusion criteria, candidates, availability, what impact current and future complications hold, and what most recent data show on the promising correlation with other imaging modalities.