Transforming American Cardio-Diagnostics

Cardio-diagnostics has been projected as an important specialty form of medicine. By definition, it is the gathering of information on an individual’s heart, and interpreting that information to form a diagnosis. The importance of this practice can be determined not only by the lethality of the diseases it detects, but by the sheer number of those who are at risk of these diseases.

Heart Disease has been well known as the largest cause of death in the United States, killing more than any other disease every year, even outsizing the recent COVID epidemic, but every year before and since.

Diet, nutrition, physical activity levels, and drug use, are all common factors that equate to the risk for Cardiovascular Disease. Genetic history is also a discoverable risk factor that can be uncovered by doctors. ECG Systems are the diagnostic technology used in the regular screening for Cardiovascular Disease.

In the practice of Cardiovascular Medicine, the ECG Test, specifically, the Resting ECG test is the most common tool used to diagnose existing Heart Disease and Cardiovascular events. From small arrhythmias, to allergic reactions and even heart attacks, an ECG Test is required to find hard evidence of these events and discover which part of the heart is failing or malfunctioning.

Cardiac injury, hypertrophy, blockages, and even the identification of what part of the Heart has been afflicted, are all pieces of information that can be taken with an ECG Test. Modern age Nasiff CardioCard ECG Systems can even identify these problems with Auto-Diagnostic Algorithms similar to AI, and inform the performing physician of the afflictions within 10–30 seconds of an ECG Test.

In order for a doctor to find signs of a heart attack, stroke, or other cardiac event, an ECG Test must be done. Not even just once, but regularly on everyone, not just those who are so obviously at risk. A healthy, athletic looking person can have a heart attack, can have coronary artery disease, and there is often no visible identifier of the build up of these diseases.

One piece of evidence for this information is that things such as cake and carbs make a person fat, steak and fatty foods do not. A person’s weight may be an identifier of how healthy a person’s diet, but an individual who has visibly built muscle mass can also have eaten just the same amount of fatty proteins and have the same build-up of the resulting cholesterol in their blood vessels.

In my personal story, I often try to have this conversation with almost everyone I meet. One gentleman recently, was a fit and healthy 50-year-old with a young family, just graduating from college. He told me that at 45 he had a severe heart attack that had not been identified with his regular doctors’ visits. This gentleman had waited almost 20 hours before finding help at a local hospital. A blockage had slowed the flow of blood to his lungs and this affliction was slowly suffocating his heart muscles of oxygen, as well as the rest of his body and brain.

Compare this event to a stroke, an affliction that starts and ends in the Cardiovascular System, but only allows those affected, on average, one hour, to respond and not have permanent damage or loss of life.

More common and frequent cardio-diagnostic testing will allow for a decrease in the number of those who suffer injury and death from cardiovascular diseases. It is important to know that even while diet, physical activity levels, and other genetic factors contribute to the health of an individual, a seemingly healthy, athletic, fit person, can be at just as great a risk for artery disease, heart attack, and stroke.

Nasiff CardioCard Computer ECG Systems are one of the most precise Auto-Diagnostic Systems on the market. A technology available to more of the industry than most other similar systems, Nasiff Diagnostic ECG Systems are logically one of the best options for most centers requiring High Quality Cardiac Technologies. Learn more about the company and technologies at: WWW.NASIFF.COM

Cardiologist using computer ecg system. Diagnostic ecg system being used by a cardiologist.