Your heart rate will be constantly monitored using an electrocardiograph or ECG (sometimes called an EKG).
Your heart rate will need to be checked using an electrocardiograph or ECG (sometimes called an EKG) before and during your treatment with mitoxantrone.
Instead most sequences use ECG gating to acquire images at each stage of the cardiac cycle over several heart beats.
To be sure this medication is not causing harmful effects, your heart function may need to be checked using an electrocardiograph or ECG (sometimes called an EKG).
Tests which falsely indicate the existence of a problem are likely to lead to misdiagnosis, the recommendation of invasive procedures, or overtreatment, and the risks associated with managing false information are usually more troublesome than not using ECG results to make a health recommendation in low-risk individuals.
According to a Cochrane review, monitoring the fetus using ECG plus cardiotocography (CTG) resulted in fewer instances of fetal scalp blood testing, and less surgical assistance with the birth, compared to CTG alone.
If you use almotriptan long-term, your doctor may want to check your heart function periodically using an electrocardiograph or ECG (sometimes called an EKG), a machine that measures electrical activity of the heart.
Your heart function will also need to be checked using an electrocardiograph or ECG (sometimes called an EKG).
Your heart rate may also be checked using an electrocardiograph or ECG (sometimes called an EKG), which measures electrical activity of the heart.