SVMC cardiology

 

 

STRIVING TO IMPROVE YOUR LIFE ONE BEAT AT A TIME

You get one life and you get one heart. The board-certified cardiologists and associated practitioners at SVMC Cardiology are committed to helping you make the most of both.

Our patient-centered approach to care and personalized care plans maximize your quality of life while delivering the treatment you need when you need it.

Creating the appropriate treatment plan for your condition begins with a cardiac consultation. Your consultation is a chance for you to share your health history and current concerns with your cardiologist. All necessary exams and tests are conducted on-site by your cardiac care team. The results are shared and discussed directly with you so that you fully understand your condition, treatment options, associated risks, and potential lifestyle changes.

After a heart episode or surgery, there’s nothing our cardiac team and you want more than for you to just get back on your feet and live the life you want. That’s why we begin your rehabilitation program before you even leave the hospital. Through a combination of education and exercise, your personalized program will help you build strength and reduce your risk factors. Using the full range of cardio equipment in our Cardiac Rehab Center and under the watchful eye of our rehab team, you’ll improve your heart’s strength and capacity and get closer to resuming a full and active lifestyle. For more information about Cardiac Rehabilitation, click here.

In order to understand how well your heart is or isn’t functioning, an echocardiogram may be performed. This non-invasive procedure uses sound waves to produce images of your heart. Both of SVMC’s cardiologists are board certified in echocardiography and able to observe how your heart is pumping and identify any abnormalities in the heart muscle or valves. An echocardiogram allows our team to make the most informed and appropriate recommendations for the next steps in your care.

If a standard echocardiogram does not provide a clear image of your heart, your SVMC care team may recommend a transesophageal echocardiogram or TEE. Performed at the hospital, this procedure involves inserting a flexible tube containing a transducer down your throat and into your esophagus. From this closer vantage point, the transducer then uses sound waves to create more detailed images of your heart and allows for better diagnosis.

Before we treat your heart, we need understand how it’s performing. At SVMC we offer a number of non-invasive stress tests that can quickly and easily reveal a number of things including: how well your heart works during increasing levels of activity; how certain medications are impacting blood flow; the effectiveness of procedures done to improve heart performance; and more.

If you have risk factors for heart disease, calcium scoring may may help you learn more about whether you are actually at risk. The non-invasive test uses high-speed CT imaging technology to measure the hardening of the heart’s arteries, a leading indicator of heart disease and heart attacks. Visit the calcium scoring page for complete details. 

A pacemaker is one of the most effective ways to ensure a heart maintains a steady, healthy beat. The SVMC cardiac team is exceptionally skilled and experienced at both pacemaker implantation and monitoring. Considered a minor surgery, implantation takes place at the hospital with most patients returning to normal activity (and a more steadily beating heart) within a few days. Like all medical equipment, pacemakers need a little TLC every now and then. At SVMC our cardiac team can perform routine monitoring, both remotely and in the office, and reprogramming as needed.

One of the most common cardiac diagnostic tools, an EKG is a painless way to check for problems with the electrical activity of your heart. The EKG translates and records your heart’s electrical activity over a period of time and translates it into waves. Your SVMC care provider can use printouts of the waves to detect any patterns that might point to a specific condition and put together a treatment plan that meets your specific needs.

Should your SVMC cardiac care provider want to monitor your heart over a longer period of time than is practical for a standard EKG, you may be given a Holter or event monitor. Worn outside the body and completely painless, monitors are helpful in detecting abnormalities that only happen occasionally and can help your doctor link any abnormalities to specific activities or events in your day.

Carotid ultrasound
At SVMC our goal is to treat your health issues before they become problems. Using our sophisticated carotid ultrasound test, your cardiac care provider can detect blockages in your neck arteries that could lead to a stroke or indicate problems in other parts or your circulatory system.

Education
Because understanding what causes heart problems is essential to resolving them, we offer a variety of educational resources to patients and their families.  Workshops are offered on an ongoing basis throughout the Dartmouth-Hitchcock network, and condition-specific literature is available in our offices. 

140 Hospital Drive, Suite 211, Bennington, VT 05201
Phone: (802) 442-0800
Fax: (833) 343-1597

Hours:
Monday – Friday:  8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Directions: 
For directions to SVMC Cardiology, click here. 

Parking:
For appointments at SVMC Cardiology, park in parking area P3 or P5.

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    Should I vaccinate my child?
    Anonym
    / Categories: WELLNESS, 2021

    Should I vaccinate my child?

    So many parents are trying to make an important decision this week. Should I get my child vaccinated? We spoke with Rebecca Bell, MD, a pediatric critical care physician with the University of Vermont, on Medical Matters Weekly last week, and distilled her most important ideas in this quick and easy guide.

    What are the real risks associated with getting COVID? Most children who get infected with COVID will not need to come into the hospital. In fact, often, they need no treatment at all. But, they do suffer other consequences. They miss school. They have to quarantine. It is very disruptive.

    A certain percentage of kids with COVID will get severe disease and need to be in the hospital. How do you know if your kid is at risk of being one that will get severe disease? We don’t know. In fact, a lot of previously healthy children get admitted to the hospital. There is no way to predict which children will be more severely ill.

    What does a serious case of COVID look like in kids? COVID looks different in kids of different ages. Adolescents tend to get something similar to what we see in adults. They get severe pneumonia. They need a lot of oxygen and a lot of help breathing. Much of the damage in the body is actually caused by an unprepared immune system working really hard to get rid of the virus. We give therapies like steroids to damp down the immune system response. Other medications to control the immune system response may be necessary as well. Because the blood vessels can get inflamed, we give blood thinners to avoid blood clots. Recovery from COVID pneumonia in previously healthy hospitalized children takes longer than recovery from other pneumonias.

    In infants, we see fevers and systemic inflammation. Babies who don’t feel well may stop drinking and need hospital treatment for dehydration. They may also have difficulty breathing.

    Elementary-aged kids, the group that is newly eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine, are susceptible to pneumonia and also MIS-C, multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children. About 5,500 children in the United States have gotten MIS-C related to COVID. They get infected with what appears to be a mild case, but a month later, they experience systemic inflammation that can affect the heart and other organs. Treatment for this requires steroids and other therapies and help support blood pressure and heart function.

    As a percentage, all of these conditions are rare, but they become more prevalent as the number of COVID cases in these groups increase.

    Wouldn’t getting COVID naturally build my child’s immune system? Many people do have evidence of some immunity after COVID infection. However, infection-induced immunity is less predictable and not as long-lasting as vaccine-induced immunity. And you have to get sick to get infection-induced immunity. Vaccination is the safest and most predictable way to achieve immunity.

    The vaccine encourages your child’s body to build the immunity before the real virus arrives. With the vaccine, there is no virus and so no virus replicating. The vaccine gives your child’s body instructions to make a spike protein to show your immune system, so your immune system can prepare in a controlled way. The immune system does not go into overdrive.

    Vaccinations are not like standard medications. With vaccination, nothing in the body is modified or changed. Instead, the vaccine presents information to your immune system and then the body reacts in a way that it normally would.

    What are the common side effects? People who are 5 – 11 years old in the vaccine clinical trial reported having a sore arm and sometime redness and swelling at the injection site at about the same frequency as adolescents and young adults. They reported fewer systemic side effects (fatigue, headache, muscle aches) than adolescents and young adults, likely due to the smaller dose.

    I am worried about my child’s fertility or other long-term side effects. It’s natural to worry about long-term side effects. Vaccine side effects, even very rare ones, are seen within 6 – 8 weeks of receiving the vaccine. Because the vaccine presents information to the body and then goes away, there is no biologic reason for a problem to show up years down the line.

    Because this vaccine has been given to hundreds of millions of people, including many millions of adolescents, even very rare side effects have been picked up. In adolescent males and young men the risk of myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) in the week after the second dose increases above the typical baseline rate of myocarditis in this population. This is called vaccine-associated myocarditis, and it is very rare: dozens of cases per million doses in this demographic. In fact, it is more rare and more mild than myocarditis caused by the COVID infection.

    I fear I may regret getting my child vaccinated. That is an understandable feeling, especially because this vaccine is new for children. But hundreds of millions of people have received this vaccine, and we have reassuring data that it is safe and effective. On the other hand, we are still learning about the long-term of effects of the virus that causes COVID-19. There is more uncertainty in how the virus will affect our children long term than the vaccine.

    The SARS-CoV-2 virus is not going away. Vaccination will prepare a child’s immune system to be ready for that eventual exposure. This decreases the likelihood of severe disease.  Choosing not to vaccinate is an active decision too, and you could also feel regret at having not vaccinated. Even delaying the vaccine comes with substantial risks at this phase in the pandemic. While there are no absolutely risk-free options, the vaccine comes with far fewer risks than the disease.

    If you have additional questions, please join pediatricians from around the state for a series of open forums on the topic of vaccinations for your child. More information at http://www.aapvt.org/news/join-us-conversation-about-covid-19-vaccines-children.

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