This page is intended for use by clinicians at Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham as a guideline for referring patients to Cardiology.
How to refer
If a patient needs further input from Cardiology, please refer via the following methods:
Cardiology emergency
If you suspect a cardiology emergency or need to speak directly with the Cardiology team, please contact:
- Cardiac nurses via Switchboard from Monday to Sunday, 08:00-20:00
- Cardiology registrar via Switchboard who will be available at all hours
Monday to Sunday (all hours)
- Refer all patients via PICS (Requests > Cardiology Review Referral UHB and the registrar or above to request)
- Between Monday to Sunday from 08:00-20:00, referrals will be triaged by cardiology nurses and the patient will be reviewed accordingly
- Cardiac nurses do not need to be routinely called to be informed of the referral
- If the referral is not urgent and outside the above hours, but you feel the patient needs to stay in for an inpatient review, the referral will be triaged in the morning and the Cardiology team will review in MSDEC during normal working hours
- Do not refer patients for an outpatient appointment via PICS, contact the Cardiology consultant's secretary to arrange an outpatient appointment
Suspected heart failure
Refer patients with suspected heart failure via PICS (Request > Heart failure referral).
How to request an echocardiogram in MSDEC
- Submit a request via PICS (Request > Transthoracic Echocardiography (TTE) – Standard)
- Emergency echocardiogram:
- Contact Joe Bradley (available on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday between 09:00-17:00)
- His mobile number is available in the cardiology diagnostic diary
- Speak to the MSDEC nursing team for the diary
- Emergency echocardiogram out of hours:
- Consider admitting the patient for an inpatient echocardiogram and specialist review
- Urgent requests (required within next two weeks):
- Submit a written referral (in addition to a PICS referral) in the MSDEC cardiology diagnostics diary (five slots available on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays)
- Non-urgent requests:
- Can be performed within six weeks in the Outpatient department
- Only request an echocardiogram if advised by the registrar or consultant
- Ensure the following have been completed and included to requestanechocardiogram:
- ECG, weight, height
- Bloods: FBC, U+Es, CRP, TFTs, calcium, magnesium, troponin (if relevant), NT-proBNP, d-dimer (if relevant)
- CXR
- Correct contact details including an address and contact details
- Please note:
- Patients with suspected heart failure (based on symptoms and signs) require an echo to confirm the diagnosis but if they already have an echo showing left ventricular dysfunction, they do not need another
- If an echocardiogram has already been performed, repeat only if there is a discrepancy between previous result and current clinical presentation, or if a new or worsening murmur is apparent
- If the request is out of hours, please consider admitting the patient for monitoring
Echocardiogram timings
Emergency (less than 24 hours)
- Acute decompensated Heart failure (NYHA III-IV)
- Suspected large volume pericardial effusion/tamponade
- AF with adverse features (needs adequate rate control first)
- Suspected cardiomyopathy or moderate-severe valvular heart disease with adverse features
- Pulmonary embolism with right heart strain
- Aortic dissection
- Tachy/bradyarrhythmia with adverse features*
Urgent (less than two weeks)
- Suspected Heart failure with BNP > 2000ng/L
- AF with suspected stable heart failure
- Suspected stable moderate-severe valvular heart disease
- Suspected cardiomyopathy without adverse features
- tachy/bradyarrhythmia detected on holter monitor without adverse features
- Pregnant women without adverse features*
Non-urgent (less than six weeks)
- Suspected heart failure with BNP 400-200ng/L
- Pericardial disease
- Newly diagnosed AF without adverse features
- Suspected valvular heart disease without adverse features*
- Abnormal ECG (i.e. hypertension related LVH or unexplained bundle branch block without adverse features)
*Adverse features include syncope, myocardial infarction, acute heart failure and cardiac arrest.
How to request a Holter monitor in MSDEC
- Submit a request via PICS (Request > 24hr Holter)
- Emergency Holter monitor:
- Contact contact Joe Bradley (Monday to Friday, 08:00-17:00)
- His mobile number is available in the cardiology diagnostic diary
- Speak to the MSDEC nursing team for the diary
- Urgent requests (required within next two weeks):
- Submit a written referral (in addition to a PICS referral) in the SDEC cardiology diagnostics diary (three slots available on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays)
- Patients requiring urgent 48 or 72 hour ambulatory monitoring:
- Discuss with Joe Bradley to determine availability
- Non-urgent requests:
- Can be performed within six weeks in the outpatient department
- Only request a Holter monitor if advised by the registrar or consultant
- Ensure the following have been completed and included to request a Holter monitor:
- ECG, weight, height
- Bloods: FBC, U+Es, CRP, TFTs, Calcium, Magnesium, troponin (if relevant), NT-proBNP, d-dimer (if relevant)
- CXR
- Correct contact details including an address and contact details
Last reviewed: 04 October 2024