Procedures
Cardiac Catheterization
Electrophysiology
Conducted to identify the location of your heart’s electrical pathways. Electrical wires are inserted into a catheter and guided through blood vessels in your arm or leg to your heart. While inside the chambers of the heart, the wires record abnormal impulses or heartbeats. Once the abnormality is discovered, it may be treated with radiofrequency catheter ablation.
Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation
A procedure used to treat some types of rapid heart beating. A catheter with an electrode at its tip is guided to the area of the heart muscle, where there's an extra pathway and a mild, painless radiofrequency energy, is transmitted to the pathway and this causes heart muscle cells in a very small area to die, which stops the area from conducting the extra impulses that causes the heart to beat too rapidly.
Pacemaker Implantation and Management
Implantation of a small, battery-operated device that helps the heart beat in a regular rhythm.
Implantable Defibrillator Placement and Management
An ICD is a small electronic device, about the size of a deck of cards , that is placed inside the body. It constantly monitors your heart rhythm. If it senses a dangerous rapid heart rhythm, it delivers one or more pulses or shocks to the heart and restores a more normal rhythm.
Percutaneous Coronary Interventions
Atherectomy
Atherectomy is a procedure performed to treat blockages in the arteries. The narrowed arteries are widened by inserting a catheter carrying a device, such as a rotating drill or a cutter into the artery.
Balloon angioplasty
Balloon angioplasty, also known as PTCA or coronary angioplasty, is a procedure used to treat blockages in the coronary arteries. A catheter with a small balloon is inserted into the blocked artery and dilated to open the artery that supplies the heart muscle with blood.
Coronary Stent
A coronary stent is a cylindrical, wire mesh device that is placed by a catheter into a previously blocked artery to help keep it open.
Alcohol Septal Ablation
Alcohol septal ablation is a percutaneous, minimally-invasive treatment performed by an interventional cardiologist to relieve symptoms and improve functional status in severely symptomatic patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy who meet strict clinical, anatomic and physiologic selection criteria.
Valvuloplasty
Valvuloplasty is a non-surgical procedure that may be used to open a narrow valve within the heart.
Patent Foreman Ovale
A patent foramen ovale is a small, flap-like opening in the dividing wall (septum) between the upper two chambers of the heart – the left atrium and the right atrium. In most people, the two flap-like sections of septum, which form the foramen ovale, fuse together after birth. However, in approximately 15-20% of individuals the foramen doesn’t fuse together and remains open or “patent”. If the blood that crosses the PFO contains debris or a clot, it can enter the arteries which supply the brain and cause a stroke or transient ischemic attack (TIA). Nowadays, there is a non-surgical method to treat PFO using a device called a septal repair implant. PFO closure is performed in the cardiac catheterization laboratory by a physician.
Peripheral Vascular Catheterization or Intervention
Diagnostic Testing
Cardiac Ultrasound Imaging
This is an ultrasound test that sends sound waves into the chest to rebound from the heart's walls and valves. The recorded waves show the shape, texture and movement of the valves on an echocardiogram. They also show the size of the heart chambers and how well they're working.
Transesophageal Echocardiography (TEE)
Transesophageal echocardiography is a special type of ultrasound imaging procedure. A transducer placed on the end of a tube is passed down a person's throat and into the esophagus. With the esophagus being close to the heart, images from TEE can give very clear pictures of the heart and its structures.
Abdominal Aorta Ultrasound
An abdominal aorta ultrasound is an imaging of the abdominal aorta that looks for potential aneurysms.
Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA)

Accreditation by the ICACTL means that Jackson Heart Clinic, PA has undergone a thorough review of its operational and technical components by a panel of experts. The ICACTL grants accreditation only to those facilities that are found to be providing quality patient care, in compliance with national standards through a comprehensive application process including detailed case study review.
ICACTL accreditation is a "seal of approval" that patients can rely on as an indication that the facility has been carefully critiqued on all aspects of its operations considered relevant by medical experts in the field of CT.
CTA detects:
- Presence of plaque(fatty deposits) in vessels of the heart or elsewhere in the body
- The quality of that plaque (soft, unstable, more likely to rupture or more stable and hardened)
- Presence and amount of calcium build-up in the vessels of the heart or elsewhere in the body
- Cause of atypical chest pain
Cardiac Calcium Scoring
A cardiac calcium score is a screening tool that measures how much calcified plaque is present in the heart arteries of an individual. There is a direct correlation between the amount of calcium in these arteries and the likelihood of a future cardiac event such as heart attack or stroke.
Doppler Studies
An ultrasound to evaluate blood vessels in the neck that lead to the brain.
Arterial Doppler
Also called ABI, is a comparison of blood pressures of the arms and ankles. May involve a short walk on the treadmill, followed by an ultrasound to evaluate blood flow in the legs.
Venous Doppler
An ultrasound to evaluate the veins of the arm or leg for blood clots.
Electrocardiograms (ECG)
Exercise Stress Testing
Also known as a treadmill test, in which EKG and blood pressure readings are monitored while walking on a treadmill. Nuclear Cardiac Imaging
Outpatient Telemetry Monitoring
Holter monitoring is usually conducted over a 24-hour period while the patient goes about his or her usual daily activities. It is a continuous recording of the electrocardiogram, which is useful for detecting arrhythmias that may not appear during a resting electrocardiogram.
Event (Loop) Monitoring
Like Holter monitoring, event monitoring involves wearing a very small, portable EKG recorder. However, a holter monitor is worn for a few days at most; an event monitor can be worn for months. An event monitor is activated when you have "an event," that is, you feel the symptoms of your heart problem (an arrhythmia, for example). The recorded data can be sent over the phone to your doctors for analysis.
Transtelephonic pacemaker monitoring
Transtelephonic pacemaker monitoring is used to record the heart rate and rhythms for brief periods, which are sent to a recorder by telephone.
PADnet
In just 15 – 20 minutes, during a regular office visit, the non-invasive ABI, TBI and PVR tests help identify obstructive periperal disease and determine whether medical or surgical treatment is necessary.


