Suggested Treatment
Centers
India External Counter
Pulsation Therapy (ECP)
External Counter Pulsation (ECP) is a cardiac care therapy that provides
relief from angina pectoris (severe chest pain) without surgery or
medication. The ECP technique was pioneered in the U.S. in the 1950s, then
developed, refined, and widely used in Asia while western physicians
turned to a variety of surgical procedures. With the reintroduction of ECP
to the U.S. in the 1980s, doctors and patients finally saw a low cost, low
risk therapeutic alternative to surgical or chemical intervention.
ECP is a simple, non-invasive, non-pharmacological, low risk, painless
therapy that can be provided to a patient at a fraction of the cost of
surgical alternatives!
Clinical trials have confirmed the benefits of ECP treatment. They
include: symptomatic relief of angina unresponsive to medical therapy,
improved blood flow to deprived areas of heart muscle demonstrated by the
results of thallium stress testing, elimination or reduction of nitrate
use, improved ability to exercise.
In a 3-year, follow-up study, the majority of patients remained free of
angina and showed persistent improvements in their thallium scans.
Patients and their families usually report noticeably greater ability to
engage in daily activity.
A computer interprets the patient's ECG and provides timing signals that
control the sequential inflation and deflation of balloon pressure cuffs
wrapped around the extensive vascular beds of the patient's calves,
thighs, and buttocks. Each inflation cycle is timed to start and end
during the resting phase of the patient's heartbeat (diastole).
As diastole begins, the cuffs inflate rapidly and sequentially from the
calves to the buttocks, firmly compressing the patient's vasculature. This
has two immediate effects: One, a strong retrograde "counter-pulse" occurs
in the arterial system, forcing freshly oxygenated blood back toward the
heart and the coronary arteries. And Two, an increased volume of venous
blood is returned to the heart under increased pressure. The combined
effect of these two events is to increase the oxygen supply and perfusion
pressure in the myocardium (heart muscle) and to increase "pre-load" so
the heart has a greater volume of blood to pump during the next systolic
event.
Next, as the patient's heart nears the end of diastole and prepares for
systole (ventricular contraction), the computer instructs the deflation
valves to open with a vacuum which deflates the cuffs better and quicker
and instantly. This action also provides therapeutic advantages by
reducing the heart's after-load. Since the vascular beds in the lower
extremities are essentially empty, the resistance to blood flow is
markedly reduced, thereby decreasing the amount of work that the heart
must do to pump blood to these areas (reducing oxygen demand within the
myocardium).
As a result of these diastolic augmentation activities, the patient's peak
diastolic pressure is significantly increased, benefiting circulation in
the heart muscle and in other organs as well. At the same time, the
patient's systolic pressure is reduced, to the general benefit of the
vascular system.
Advantage for Patients - 35 hours of treatment cost as little as
one-fourth to one-sixth the cost of invasive surgery…without any of the
risk. Per-treatment costs may vary by office or region. In USA the
procedure is eligible for reimbursement by Medicare, most private
insurance, or direct billing by the physician. The patient does not have
to give up work or other normal daily activities for a lengthy hospital
stay and recuperation time.
"Technology for treating cardiovascular disease is slowly moving from very
invasive to less invasive methods. In the seventies, bypass surgery was
the big news in the treatment of coronary artery disease. In the eighties,
it was balloon angioplasty and in the nineties, it was the stent. Now, we
can move still a step further to a totally non-invasive treatment with ECP."
The patient relaxes on a comfortably padded mattress while a trained nurse
or therapist wraps the muscular areas of the patient's calves, thighs, and
buttocks with pneumatic cuffs, similar to blood pressure cuffs. Hoses
connect the cuffs to an air pressure/vacuum pump enclosed within the bed
base. Next to the bed is the computer-controlled operator's console. Three
ECG electrodes are fastened to the patient's chest so the computer can
monitor his or her heart rate. A plethysmograph sensor is placed on the
patient's finger to detect the ebb and surge of each pulse wave.
When patients have angina, their bodies are telling them that their heart
is not receiving enough oxygen. A treatment, in harmony with patients
heart, can improve circulation to the heart muscle. ECP treatment appears
to stimulate the opening of new, natural pathways around narrowed or
blocked arteries. After ECP treatment, patients may find that:
++ they can walk farther, carry heavier packages, and be more active
without having angina.
++ they have fewer attacks of angina.
++ their episodes of angina are less intense.
++ they need less anti-anginal medication.
++ they can return to work, go out to dinner, garden, travel, or enjoy
golf, tennis, or bowling
once again.
++ they no longer restrict their social lives, volunteer activities, or
exercise because they are
worried that they will cause angina.
If patients are one of more than seven million people in the United States
with angina, they may be all too familiar with angina. Angina signals that
a part of the heart muscle is not receiving an adequate supply of blood
and oxygen. The heart requires a particularly rich blood supply because of
its heavy workload, and receives this nourishment through the coronary
arteries. When these vessels are narrowed or blocked, restricting blood
flow, they fail to supply adequate oxygen.
Then, while the patient relaxes and talks to visitors, watches TV or a
video, listens to music, or even takes a nap, the operator starts the
procedure and adjusts the machine during the hour-long procedure.
Studies conducted at numerous university medical centers and published in
peer-reviewed medical journals have demonstrated benefits including:
++ elimination or decrease in exercise-induced signs of lack of oxygen to
the heart muscle
(ischemia).
++ increased exercise tolerance .
++ elimination or decrease in episodes of chest pain.
++ decrease in need for anti-anginal medication
Spectramed Systems is the demonstration centre and training centre for
doctors for the External Counter Pulsation device used for treatment of
stable Ischaemic Heart disease. Our centre in Ludhiana, Punjab and is
professionally managed by medical doctors.
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