Our Services
We provide the full range of cardiac outpatient testing and cardiac inpatient procedures to help care for your heart health.
In-House Services
ECG
Resting electrocardiography (heart electrical rhythm trace)
Holter monitor (24 hour)
Continuous 24-hour heart rhythm recording and analysis
Event monitor (14 days)
Continuous heart beat recording, analysing any significant electrical events
Echocardiography
Ultrasound assessment of heart structure and function at rest
Stress testing
Monitoring electrical rhythm during supervised exercise protocol. Often combined with assessment of heart function before and after exercise by ultrasound (stress echo)
Cardio-Oncology care
Cardiac imaging and assessment to optimise cardiac and cancer outcomes in cancer patients and survivors
Blood pressure monitor
Automatic measurement of multiple blood pressures over a 24 hour period with subsequent analysis
Cardiac device testing
Testing of implantable cardiac electronic devices function
In-Hospital Procedures
Coronary angiography
Selective imaging of coronary (heart) arteries, typically performed through the wrist or groin arteries
Coronary stenting
Placement of metallic stents at site of coronary (heart) artery narrowings
Cardiac ablation
Alterating cardiac electrical activation patterns to minimise chance of recurrent fast rhythms. Typically performed as a follow on from an EPS
Electrophysiological
studies (EPS)
Assessment of cardiac (heart) electrical activation patterns, specifically looking for any tendency to fast or slow rhythm of concern and typically performed via the groin veins
Cardiac device
implantations
Insertion of electronic systems (device and leads) to help monitor (loop recorders) or regulate heart rhythms (pacemakers, defibrillators)
Structural Heart Interventions
Repairing heart valves and other structural heart abnormalities without the need for open heart surgery
Transoesophageal echocardiography
Ultrasound assessment of heart structure and function at rest
Cardioversions
Resetting of heart rhythm back to normal by passing a small amount of electrical current through it under brief anaesthesia