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How can I make a same-day appointment with a Cardiologist in Las Vegas?
On average, patients who use Zocdoc can search for a Cardiologist in Las Vegas, book an appointment, and see the Cardiologist within 24 hours. Same-day appointments are often available, you can search for real-time availability of Cardiologists in Las Vegas who accept your insurance and make an appointment online.
How can I find a Las Vegas Cardiologist who takes my insurance?
Zocdoc lets you search specifically for a Las Vegas Cardiologist who takes your insurance. Just choose your carrier and plan from the drop-down menu at the top of the page. If you’re not sure which plan you have, you can use Zocdoc’s insurance checker to find out.
How can I book an appointment online with a Cardiologist in Las Vegas?
Zocdoc is a free online service that helps patients find Cardiologists in Las Vegas and book appointments instantly. You can search for Las Vegas Cardiologists by symptom or visit reason. Then, choose your insurance plan. Based on that information, you’ll see a list of providers who meet your search criteria, along with their available appointment slots.
How can I find a female Cardiologist in Las Vegas?
When you search for Las Vegas Cardiologists on Zocdoc, you can filter your results by gender, in addition to other criteria. That way, you’ll only see Cardiologists in Las Vegas who match your preferences.
How can I find a Las Vegas Cardiologist who sees patients after hours?
On Zocdoc, you can search specifically for Las Vegas Cardiologists with availability after 5 p.m.
How can I find a top-rated Cardiologist in Las Vegas?
You can use Zocdoc to find Cardiologists in Las Vegas who are highly rated by other patients. These ratings are based on verified reviews submitted by real patients. Every time a patient completes an appointment booked on Zocdoc, they’re invited to review their experience. Each review must comply with Zocdoc’s guidelines.
How can I find a video visit with a Cardiologist online in Las Vegas?
Cardiologists in Las Vegas on Zocdoc who see patients through online video visits will have a purple video icon on their profiles. You can also filter your search results to show only Cardiologists who offer video visits.
Are video visits with a Cardiologist online covered by my insurance?
Most insurers provide coverage for video visits at the same cost as in-person visits. You can search on Zocdoc specifically for Cardiologists in Las Vegas who accept your insurance for video visits by selecting your carrier and plan from the drop-down menu at the top of the page. We recommend you check with your insurance carrier directly to confirm your coverage and out of pocket costs for video visits.
How can I find a Cardiologist in Las Vegas who sees patients in the morning or evening?
Zocdoc lets you search specifically for a Cardiologist who has appointments available before 10:00 am, or after 5:00 pm. Just choose the special hours filter at the top of our search page.
How can I find a Cardiologist in Las Vegas who sees patients during the weekend?
Zocdoc let's you see real-time availability for Cardiologists in Las Vegas. Many Cardiologists offer appointments on Saturdays and Sundays.
Who are cardiologists?
Cardiology studies conditions and treatments related to the cardiovascular system, including the heart and blood vessels. Cardiologists are doctors who specialize in cardiology. Some common diseases treated by cardiologists are heart attacks, heart valve disease, arrhythmia, and high blood pressure. Cardiologists can work in hospitals or have private practices.
What kind of education and training do cardiologists receive?
Cardiologists train for more than a decade before they start practicing. After completing four years of medical school, they train for three more years. After that, they can choose to specialize in a specialty specific to cardiology. Finally, they are certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine upon completing the exam.
What are the different types of cardiologists?
Based on their specialization, cardiologists can be of various types. These include:
- General adult cardiologists: General adult cardiologists diagnose and treat general problems affecting your heart and blood vessels, such as high cholesterol, heart attacks, and congestive heart failure. They also help prevent the onset of heart conditions.
- Adult congenital heart specialists: If you have ever been diagnosed with a structural heart problem that developed before your birth, adult congenital heart specialists provide you with lifelong care.
- Interventional cardiologists: Interventional cardiologists diagnose and treat heart conditions using non-surgical procedures that involve inserting a thin, flexible tube through a small cut in your skin. This approach helps them open blocked arteries, replace or repair damaged heart valves, and perform various other procedures.
- Cardiac rehabilitation specialists: Cardiac rehabilitation helps you recover if you have a cardiovascular issue and/or undergo heart surgery. Cardiac rehabilitation specialists develop medically supervised personal programs, recommend lifestyle changes, and offer nutrition education to improve your health.
- Advanced heart failure or transplant specialists: Advanced heart failure specialists provide heart transplants to replace a heart that is damaged or failing. They also perform complex surgeries to clean up scar tissue or remove temporary heart pumps.
- Heart surgeons: If you have a heart condition that medications, lifestyle changes, and other non-invasive treatments are not helping, surgery can treat or cure it. Heart surgeons offer both routine and complex surgical procedures for problems like blocked arteries, faulty heart valves, and heart failure.
When should you see a cardiologist near you?
You should immediately consult a cardiologist if you're experiencing symptoms like shortness of breath, dizziness, fainting, or chest pain. Apart from these, there can be other conditions that you might be experiencing due to underlying cardiovascular disease. These can include a sudden feeling of tightness in the chest under the breastbone, sharp pain accompanied by shortness of breath, nausea, rapid heart rate, confusion, excessive sweating, and rapid breathing, all signs of heart disease.
Angina is chest pain that mainly occurs when the heart doesn't get enough oxygen. While not all chest pains are angina, one must immediately consult a cardiologist for such a symptom.
What is the cardiovascular system, and which diseases are associated with it?
Commonly referred to as the 'circulatory system,' the cardiovascular system comprises the heart (located in the center of the chest), blood, and blood vessels. Together, this system is responsible for delivering oxygen, hormones, and essential nutrients to the rest of the body. The heart pumps blood 60 to 100 times a day for 24 hours. In total, it circulates nearly 2000 gallons of blood each day. Veins bring blood to your heart, and arteries carry oxygen-rich blood from the heart and spread it to all body parts.
The arteries and veins together are called the vascular system. Apart from carrying blood, arteries also help to maintain blood pressure and control blood flow. They do so by tightening and loosening their walls. Problems in the cardiovascular system, such as a blockage in the arteries, make it harder to deliver oxygen. It ultimately leads to cardiovascular conditions such as:
- Atherosclerosis is a condition in which the arteries harden and narrow due to plaque buildup over time. It can result in the artery rupturing and forming a blood clot, which may lead to a heart attack or stroke. Plaque buildup usually occurs due to high cholesterol (LDL), smoking, and high blood pressure.
- Cardiomyopathy: In this condition, the heart muscle (myocardium) thickens and becomes stiff or enlarged, thus leading to the formation of scar tissue. The thickened myocardium prevents the heart from pumping blood effectively and leads to heart failure. A person in the early stages of cardiomyopathy may not experience any symptoms. Still, as the disease progresses, symptoms such as swelling in the legs, heart palpitations, fatigue, and shortness of breath may appear.
- Arrhythmia: An arrhythmia is an abnormal or irregular heart rhythm. There are three types of arrhythmia: supraventricular (which begins in the heart's upper chamber), ventricular (which starts in the heart's lower chambers), and bradyarrhythmia (a slow heart rhythm caused by an issue in the heart's conduction system). Pounding in the chest, palpitations, chest discomfort, and dizziness indicate an irregular heartbeat. Some arrhythmias can be fatal.
What is a heart attack?
A person suffers from myocardial infarction or heart attack when the heart muscles don't get enough blood to function due to coronary artery disease or spasm and contraction in the coronary artery. It can lead to a stoppage of blood flow to the heart muscle.
Recognizing heart attack symptoms is vital as one needs to contact doctors or emergency services as soon as possible to avoid severe consequences. Some common symptoms are tightness, squeezing, heaviness in the chest, heartburn, nausea, shortness of breath, coughing, and wheezing.
Other signs can also include:
- Hypoxemia - caused by dangerously low levels of oxygen in the blood
- Pulmonary edema - caused by fluid accumulating in and around the lungs
- Cardiogenic shock - caused by a sudden drop in blood pressure because of low blood supply in the heart of the body to function correctly
Diagnosis and treatment of heart attack
People with certain underlying conditions like high cholesterol, high blood pressure, obesity, or genetic disorders are more susceptible to heart attacks. Therefore, while diagnosing, doctors recommend the patient undergo a blood test to detect any underlying condition. The doctor will also ask for family history to rule out genetic factors. Age, too, plays an essential role in the diagnosis.
Patients will also need to undergo tests like X-rays, CT scans, and echocardiograms to get an image of the heart. Cardiologists may recommend electrocardiography to measure the electrical functionality of the heart. The doctor may also perform cardiac catheterization to examine the inside of the heart.
The immediate response to a heart attack is crucial. It is necessary to hospitalize the patient as soon as possible, as heart attacks can be life-threatening. One needs to call for emergency care immediately and follow the instructions of the emergency team.
Once the emergency team arrives, they will try to stabilize the patient's condition by providing oxygen. At the hospital, the medical team takes over the treatment. The three most common treatment practices by the medical team include:
- Medications to dissolve blood clots
- Percutaneous coronary intervention: A method to restore blood flow to the damaged tissue
- Coronary artery bypass grafting or heart bypass: To improve blood flow by diverting the blood around the damaged areas of the arteries.
A patient can suffer from different complications after a heart attack, depending on the severity of the attack. Depression is common for patients after a heart attack. Conditions like arrhythmia, where the heartbeat is irregular, or edema, the accumulation of fluid causing swelling in the limbs, can also develop.
What kind of tests do cardiologists order or perform?
Cardiologists may conduct or order various tests to assess and diagnose heart conditions. These tests include:
- Cardiac catheterization: This involves a small tube to collect data, take pictures, relieve blockages, and assess heart function using fluoroscopy.
- Nuclear cardiology: This uses radioactive materials for noninvasive studies, such as infarction imaging, SPECT, planar imaging, and myocardial perfusion imaging.
- Exercise test or stress test: This test reveals changes in heart rhythm during rest and exercise, measuring the heart's performance and limitations.
- Echocardiogram: This provides an ultrasound picture showing the structure of heart chambers, surrounding areas, and the heart's functioning.
- Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG): This test records the heart's electrical activity.
- Ambulatory ECG: This ECG monitors heart rhythms during exercise or regular activities using small metal electrodes attached to the chest. These electrodes are connected to a Holter monitor.
- An electrophysiology study (EPS) of the heart involves threading a catheter into a vein at the top of the leg, reaching the heart to measure electrical signals. This helps diagnose symptoms, determine the need for a pacemaker, and guide treatment for arrhythmias.
What should one expect during a visit to a cardiologist?
When you visit a cardiologist, they will discuss your symptoms and habits to gather relevant information. Additionally, they may conduct several tests to identify specific cardiovascular conditions, including an EKG, cardiac catheterization, ultrasound, cardiac biopsy, and stress test. These tests assess your overall heart health.
After analyzing the results, the cardiologist will diagnose your condition and propose a treatment plan. Common cardiology conditions involve congenital heart disease, coronary artery disease, and vascular disease. Treatment plans may include prescriptions or guidance on diet and lifestyle changes. In more extreme cases, the doctor may recommend heart surgery of varying degrees.
How can you find a top-rated cardiologist near you in Las Vegas?
People suffering from heart disease or those who have suffered heart attacks require a lot of extensive care and regular consultation with cardiologists. Access to medical care at the right time is imperative to prevent complications. However, finding the right specialist and getting an appointment with them can be daunting. Worry no more! Zocdoc is here to make cardiology appointment bookings easy for you.
On the Zocdoc website, enter your condition, preferred location and date, and insurance carrier. Zocdoc will list the best cardiologists in Las Vegas. You can also refine your search further using the in-built filters. Moreover, you can view the practitioners' detailed profiles about their education, training, experience, specialty, treatments offered, location, and language fluency. You can look at verified reviews and ratings by past patients to help you make the right decision. Further, you can also find out the cardiologist's gender and whether they treat children.
Using Zocdoc’s insurance detector, you can quickly identify in-network providers near you. When booking an appointment on Zocdoc, the website prompts you to share details about your insurance or to acknowledge that you are paying out-of-pocket. Some healthcare providers need you to provide insurance information to schedule appointments. If you do not have insurance or do not want to use insurance for your appointment, you can always find another suitable provider on Zocdoc. For more insurance-related queries, check Zocdoc's patient help center.
With Zocdoc, you can book appointments for the same day (24 hours), on weekdays, weekends, and even after 5 pm, depending on the practitioner's availability. Booking appointments with the right cardiologist near you on Zocdoc is fast, free, and secure.
Cardiovascular diseases in the US
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) states that about 357,000 people suffered cardiac arrest outside of hospital premises in the USA. Making the situation worse, almost 70-90% of people who experience out-of-hospital cardiac arrest expire before they can reach the hospital. Another report by the CDC reported around 7,337 deaths in Nevada in 2022 due to heart disease, ranking the state 11th in mortality rate due to heart disease.
According to the American Heart Association, cardiovascular diseases or CVD have been the leading cause of death in the USA. They also have a substantial economic burden, around $351.3 billion, approximately 14% of the total US health expenditure in 2014-2015.
According to the Social Health of Nevada Report by the UNLV Center for Democratic Culture, one in three people in Nevada suffer from obesity or are affected by hypertension and heart disease.
Sources
Centers for Disease Prevention and Control[1]
Centers for Disease Prevention and Control[2]
The content herein is provided for general informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Medical information changes constantly, and therefore the content on this website should not be assumed to be current, complete or exhaustive. Always seek the advice of your doctor before starting or changing treatment. If you think you may have a medical emergency, please call your doctor or 9-1-1 immediately.