ASE 2024 Early Registration Rates End May 8

There is less than one month left to take advantage of early registration rates to attend ASE’s 35th Annual Scientific Sessions, June 14-16, in Portland, Oregon. Register for ASE 2024 by Wednesday, May 8, to save up to $225!

This year’s new format includes short cases with panel discussions, more audience participation, and an interactive focus with less didactic presentations. There are also lots of activities allowing you to network with your peers. Download the Schedule at a Glance offering an overview of the events taking place during the conference and start planning the sessions you want to attend.

Now is the time to also reserve your hotel room. The conference has a new hotel directly across from the convention center and hotels connected by ASE shuttles from downtown. Learn more about discounted hotel accommodations and visiting Portland

An April Shower of Exciting JASE Reports

The April issue of JASE includes, “Temporal Trends in Right Ventricular to Pulmonary Artery Coupling in Patients Undergoing Transcatheter Mitral Valve-in-Valve Replacement for Degenerated Mitral Bioprostheses.” Author Akhil Narang, MD, FASE, remarks, “Transcatheter Mitral Valve-in-Valve Implantation (TMViV) offers a safe and minimally invasive alternative for patients at high surgical risk with degenerated mitral valve prostheses. Our research group observed significant improvements in right ventricular to pulmonary artery (RV-PA) coupling indices one month after the procedure in a large single-center cohort. These findings suggest that echocardiographic-derived RV-PA coupling parameters could serve as valuable markers for monitoring outcomes following TMViV implantation in future studies.”

This issue includes various clinical investigations on diastolic exercise echo and outcome, tricuspid valve imaging in edge-to-edge repair, quantitation of mitral regurgitation with 3D echo, TEE during cardioversion, stress Doppler coronary flow velocity reserve, and fetal Doppler echo. Readers can also look forward to an imaging strategies report on the multimodality imaging approach for planning and guiding direct transcatheter tricuspid valve annuloplasty. Two editorials and five brief research communications round out this issue.

Dr. Pellikka’s editorial acknowledges the hard work and diversity of the JASE reviewer team while Dr. Eidem’s President’s Message recognizes all ASE staff with a “fun fact” to introduce readers to those helping to fulfill the strategic mission of the Society each day.

Be sure to check out April’s Author Spotlight to learn more from lead authors Christina L. Luong, MHSc, FASE and Garvan C. Kane, MD, PhD, FASE, as they discuss their recent paper, Prognostic Significance of Elevated Left Ventricular Filling Pressures with Exercise: Insights from a Cohort of 14,338 Patients.

Please see the April ASE Education Calendar for a listing of educational opportunities far and wide.


Spring Giving Fundraiser – Thank You!

The ASE Foundation would like to thank the donors who supported the Spring Giving fundraiser last week. $1,550 was raised towards ASEF’s travel grants and scholarships initiative. Your generosity empowers the Foundation to continue supporting the future of the profession. Thank you for helping the next generation of cardiovascular ultrasound professionals bloom and for kick-starting the Foundation’s 2024 Annual Appeal.

Echo VOL | 13 Issue 3


View Issue Larger | Download (PDF)

Prepare for NBE’s ASCeXAM with ASE’s 2024 Review Course

Register now for ASE’s virtual 2024 ASCeXAM Review Course, which is specifically designed to help you gain the knowledge you need to pass the ASCeXAM exam administered by the National Board of Echocardiography, Inc. (NBE). ASE offers three registration options: 

  1. Physician Registration
  2. Fellow/Allied Health Registration
  3. International Registration

Starting Monday, May 6, registrants will receive online access to all course content including, pre-recorded presentations, PDF slides, and voice recordings. This course is updated each year and contains new presentations.

Registration also includes a live component on Saturday, June 22, where course faculty will host two, two-hour question and answer sessions. The 2024 Review Course offers comprehensive echocardiography education that includes 28.75 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. As a benefit of your ASE membership, you receive reduced registration rates. Log in to your Member Portal before registering in the ASE Learning Hub. 

New Pediatric Product Available in the ASE Learning Hub: PCHD Microlessons

The PCHD Microlessons is ASE’s newest online course on pediatric and congenital heart disease. The complete educational course will consist of a collection of Modules—each containing lectures, animated videos, questions, and case discussions on 10 original PCHD topics. Modules will be released quarterly throughout the year, and Module 1, which includes the topics below, is available now in the ASE Learning Hub:

  • Fundamentals of Pediatric Echocardiography
  • Imaging of D-Transportation of the Great Arteries (D-TGA)

The PCHD Microlessons are short web-based, micro-learning activities offering a quick and easy way to access targeted learning sessions. This module series was the brain child of the late Dr. Greg Tatum, a spectacular pediatric educator.

Course content is intended for all levels of learners but is primarily designed for sonography students, fellows-in-training, and early-career sonographers. Additionally, more advanced material is also available for early- and mid-career physicians and sonographers. Earn 3.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™ for completing Module 1. Remember to log in to the ASE Member Portal before purchasing to receive your member discount!

CASE Marches Onward

The latest issue of CASE is now available with intriguing reports, including “Mitral Regurgitation due to Entrapment of Cut Mitral Chordal Apparatus in a Bileaflet Disk Prosthesis” by Bansal & Rabkin. Editor-In-Chief Vincent L. Sorrell, MD, FASE, remarked, “The authors take the readers on a clinical tour of a 38-year-old man with endocarditis that will have many aspects similar to patients we see weekly in our hospitals. Transferred from another hospital to receive a higher level of care, the patient developed severe MR and heart failure requiring urgent valve surgery. Repair was not feasible, and the patient received a typical bileaflet mechanical mitral valve replacement (MVR). However, after coming off bypass circulation, the intraoperative TEE demonstrated severe MR of the brand-new MVR. The authors do a spectacular job of walking the readers through their discovery of this patient’s pathology – entrapment of some components of the subvalvular apparatus between the MVR housing and disk. Then, they further educate readers by providing a schematic representation of how to assess for valvular and paravalvular regurgitation after MVR. Their report includes 2D and 3D TEE examples as well as drawings and photographs to drive their messaging. I’m sure you will enjoy reading this as much as I enjoyed helping prepare this for CASE.”

This issue presents two additional cases in the Valvular Heart Disease category, including a rare instance of a mitral valve-in-valve-in-valve procedure, and a report with a series of characteristic images of a disease that uniquely impacts the pulmonic and tricuspid valves. Authors in a Multimodality Imaging case submit a varied imaging approach to diagnose biventricular endomyocardial fibrosis complicated by coexisting chronic myeloid leukemia. Finally, a report for Veterinary Clinical Cardiovascular Medicine uses TTE, radiology, gross and histo-pathology to reveal the correlation between diagnostic imaging and pathology in a dog living with severe pulmonary hypertension. Dr. Sorrell’s editorial encourages readers to share their own echo insights through their social media platforms, as these platforms can serve as a valuable educational tool to teachers and learners alike.

Looking for a journal to submit your case report to? We want to hear from you! Email us with questions or submit your report today.

ONE MONTH Left to Apply for an ASEF Council Travel Grant

Submission Deadline: April 15

ASE member trainees are invited to apply for an ASEF 2024 Council Travel Grant to support their attendance at the ASE 2024 Scientific Sessions in Portland, Oregon.

These $1,000 USD grants are part of an ongoing effort by the Foundation and the Council Steering Committees to encourage trainees in cardiovascular specialties to focus on the respective echocardiography subspeciality and to recruit enthusiastic new members to ASE Councils. Additionally, grant recipients benefit from a deeper understanding of the imaging field and have the opportunity to develop meaningful mentoring relationships with established imaging faculty. Full application details are available here. The application closes April 15, 2024.

This Month: ASEF’s Spring Giving Fundraiser

Join the ASE Foundation between March 17 – 23 for our Spring Giving fundraiser. Kick-start our 2024 Annual Appeal and help the next generation of cardiovascular ultrasound professionals bloom with a contribution to our Travel Grants and Scholarships initiative.

We set a goal to raise $5,000 and need your support. Every year, the ASE Foundation offers student, sonographer, and fellow travel grants and scholarships to support training and educational conference participation. Donations made to the Travel Grants and Scholarships initiative directly impact the number of scholarships and travel grants we are able to fund.

We hope you will plan to support ASEF and the next generation of our field March 17 – 23. Donations will be accepted online here and in the ASE Portal. If you donate in the Portal, make sure to allocate your contribution towards Travel Grants and Scholarships. Email Foundation@ASEcho.org to make an early pledge.

An Extra Special Issue of CASE

The CASE Special Issue on adult congenital heart disease (ACHD) is now available with over 30 high-quality reports, including “The Utility of Multimodality Imaging in a Patient with Ebstein Anomaly” by McClelland et al. Author Isla McClelland, MD, remarked, “Ebstein anomaly patients in the adult cardiology clinic present a unique challenge to providers as they can be repaired or unrepaired and can present with progressive symptoms after many years of feeling well.  Multimodality imaging gives providers the necessary tools to adequately follow and plan surgical intervention on these patients.  Our case report presents an example of how these imaging modalities all work in concert to provide a complete medical picture of a patient’s valve anatomy and associated lesions, without which an appropriate surgical plan cannot be created.”

Most children born with congenital heart disease live beyond 50 years of age, so there are more adults with congenital heart disease living today than there are children. However, data suggests that less than 10% of adults with CHD receive the recommended subspecialty cardiovascular care. CASE Editor-in-Chief Vincent L. Sorrell, MD, FASE noted, ““It’s difficult to isolate a single report from this special issue on ACHD that should be highlighted since they all provide unique educational value related to their selected congenital abnormality. I have learned over the years that no two patients with ACHD are exactly alike. Therefore, having CASE reports as teaching examples to expand your diagnostic acumen is critically important. Malone et al. do an exceptional job of providing Journal readers with a CASE series on patients with double-chambered right ventricles. If you work in a moderate sized echo lab, you have no doubt scanned a patient with this pathology. The important question, though, is did you recognize it for what it was? These authors give you 3 CASE examples which include the typical 2D and comprehensive Doppler TTE findings, but also include ECG, fluoroscopic ventriculography, cardiovascular MRI, cardiac computed tomography and even an intraoperative surgical photograph. Their CASE series should be read by everyone who performs echocardiography and wants to improve their skills on detecting the next patient with DCRV who comes through their lab.”

This special issue serves as an educational tool, compiling reports from the adult echocardiographic community to develop more expertise in understanding these complex diseases and post-operative complications, as well as how best to acquire the necessary comprehensive images to assist in diagnosis and management.

Advanced tomographic multimodality imaging (MMI) substantially contributes to the management of patients with CHD (ACHD), so the Multimodality Imaging category is quite robust with six reports, including a rare diagnosis of a unilateral absence of a pulmonary artery in an adult with recurrent bronchopneumonia. The Coronary Artery Disease category emphasizes the role that TEE offers in patients after a Ross procedure, highlights the development of coronary aneurysms after congenital heart surgery, and includes reports that highlight the careful imaging approaches taken to anomalous left and right coronary arteries originating from the pulmonary artery.

Since one of the most common CHD pathologies in the adult is a bicuspid aortic valve, Valvular Heart Disease is an important subsection, including an extraordinary report on an 80-year-old patient with undiagnosed L-TGA who presented for TAVI evaluation. Patients with CHD are encouraged to maintain a record of their medical and surgical history, so the Post-Operative Pathology section is included with reports on the complications that may arise in the adult after various corrective surgeries for D-TGA, Ebstein anomaly, and atrioventricular canal defect. The subsection titled Interventional Echocardiography contains reports on novel transcatheter approaches to treat a patient with a primum ASD, a ruptured sinus of Valsalva aneurysm, pulmonic stenosis, and a left SVC to LA fistula.

Just Another Day in the Echo Lab offers many imaging tips and tricks among its reports, including a case series on patients variably presenting with a double-chambered RV, two patients evaluated for arterial hypertension during pregnancy, and a patient with cor triatriatum. Veterinary Clinical Cardiovascular Medicine rounds out this issue with reports in which readers will see many commonalities between diagnostic assessment in humans and animals. In this issue’s editorial, Dr. Sorrell encourages readers to expand their differential diagnoses in adults to include both common and uncommon forms of congenital heart disease.

Looking for a journal to submit your case report to? We want to hear from you! Email us with questions or submit your report today. Be sure to check out the latest Sonographer Sound-Off and Unlock the CASE features on the CASE Homepage to view more extraordinary work from your colleagues.