Cardiac imaging

Cardiac Imaging Expert Witness

Echocardiography, cardiac MRI, CT coronary angiography and the acquisition and interpretation questions that follow. The consultants instructed on these cases are practising imaging cardiologists, verified against the GMC specialist register before allocation.

  • Cardiac MRI
  • Echocardiography
  • Cardiac CT
  • Stress imaging
  • Valvular assessment
What it covers

The imaging arm of cardiology.

Most medico-legal work in this subspecialty turns on imaging decision-making: whether the correct modality was chosen, whether the scan was acquired to the accepted technical standard, whether the findings were interpreted correctly, and whether an abnormal finding should have prompted further investigation or intervention.

Accepted UK practice is set by the British Society of Echocardiography, the British Society of Cardiovascular Imaging, the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance and the European Society of Cardiology, whose modality standards are the reference a report is tested against. Each consultant is verified on the GMC Specialist Register with a cardiac imaging annotation before allocation.

Core imaging modalities

Six imaging techniques we report on.

The six modalities below cover the medico-legal ground most cardiac imaging cases sit within.

  • Transthoracic echocardiography

    2D, Doppler and strain imaging for left ventricular function, valvular disease and pericardial pathology, tested against British Society of Echocardiography minimum standards.

  • Transoesophageal echocardiography

    High-resolution imaging for infective endocarditis, intracardiac thrombus and aortic pathology — whether the procedure was indicated and the findings interpreted correctly.

  • Cardiac MRI

    Tissue characterisation for cardiomyopathy, myocardial infarction and infiltrative disease — whether the correct sequences were used and the findings met Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance standards.

  • CT coronary angiography

    Non-invasive assessment of coronary artery disease — whether the scan was acquired to British Society of Cardiovascular CT standards and reported correctly.

  • Stress imaging

    Dobutamine stress echocardiography and perfusion MRI for inducible ischaemia — whether the test was indicated and the findings interpreted correctly against ESC guidance.

  • Valvular heart disease imaging

    Quantitative assessment of aortic and mitral valve disease — whether the correct measurements were taken and the findings met the British Society of Echocardiography minimum dataset.

Why a subspecialist

Four reasons to insist on the subspecialty match.

A general cardiology opinion on an imaging case is rarely enough. Four practical reasons the match matters at the point of instruction.

Active imaging practice.

Each consultant continues to report echocardiograms, cardiac MRI and CT scans in current NHS practice, so the reporting standard behind the opinion is current rather than recalled.

Current evidence base.

Opinions are referenced to current British Society of Cardiovascular Imaging standards and ESC guidance — not how imaging was reported a decade ago.

Imaging decision-making.

The decisions a case turns on — whether to scan, which modality, how to interpret the findings — are assessed by consultants who make them every week.

Subspecialty indemnity.

Each consultant holds medico-legal indemnity covering cardiac imaging expert witness work specifically. Indemnity is verified before the instruction is allocated.

Get in touch

Instruct a cardiac imaging expert.

Send the records bundle with a brief outline of the imaging issues in dispute. Scope, quotation and named consultant returned the same working day. Fast-track available where the trial window or limitation deadline requires it.

Active imaging practice ESC-aligned Same-day allocation