title: Cardiologist
slug: cardiologist
aliases:
  - Heart Doctor
  - Cardiovascular Physician
  - Cardiac Specialist
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - cardiology
  - cardiovascular
  - heart
  - medicine
  - risk-stratification
difficulty: expert
summary: >-
  Stratifies cardiovascular risk and reads the heart's electrical and mechanical
  signals to open occluded arteries and correct failing pumps fast enough to
  save muscle and life.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: prerequisite
    note: cardiology is a subspecialty built on internal medicine training
  - slug: surgeon
    type: collaboration
    note: cardiac surgeon and cardiologist jointly decide PCI versus CABG
  - slug: emergency-physician
    type: collaboration
    note: compresses acute-coronary reasoning into the first front-door minutes
  - slug: radiologist
    type: adjacent
    note: shares interpretation of cardiac CT and MRI
  - slug: anesthesiologist
    type: collaboration
    note: partners on procedural sedation and preoperative cardiac risk
specializations:
  - Interventional Cardiologist
  - Electrophysiologist
  - Heart Failure Specialist
  - Pediatric Cardiologist
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Braunwald's Heart Disease
    kind: book
  - title: ACC/AHA Clinical Practice Guidelines
    kind: standard
  - title: Marriott's Practical Electrocardiography
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      A cardiologist exists to keep blood moving and the pump that moves it from

      failing — to find the heart disease that kills quietly and the heart
      disease

      that kills in the next hour, and to tell them apart fast. The
      cardiovascular

      system is the one organ system where minutes of ischemia become permanent
      dead

      muscle and where a rhythm that looks unremarkable on a strip can drop a
      person

      dead at dinner. The cardiologist's reason for being is to read the heart's

      electrical and mechanical signals, estimate a person's risk of a future
      event

      that hasn't happened yet, and intervene early enough that it never does —
      while

      not subjecting the worried-well to procedures their hearts never needed.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Stratify each patient's cardiovascular risk honestly, treat the artery,
      the

      muscle, or the rhythm that threatens them most, and open the occluded
      vessel or

      correct the failing pump fast enough to save myocardium and life.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      The visible work is reading ECGs and echoes and putting in stents; the
      actual

      work is risk arithmetic and timing. A cardiologist takes a cardiac
      history,

      auscultates and examines for the signs others miss, interprets the ECG
      against

      the clinical story, orders and reads echocardiograms, stress tests, and

      angiograms, and decides whether a chest pain is the artery, the muscle,
      the

      lining, or the esophagus. They manage chronic disease that never resolves
      —

      heart failure, atrial fibrillation, coronary disease — titrating drugs
      against

      blood pressure, heart rate, and renal function for years. They perform or
      refer

      for catheterization, ablation, and device implantation, and they own the

      long-term consequence of every anticoagulant they start. Underneath it all
      is

      the constant triage of the ischemic patient: is this the one whose vessel
      is

      closing right now?
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Time is muscle.** In an occluded coronary, every minute of delay to
        reperfusion is myocardium that won't come back. The door-to-balloon clock is
        not a metric, it's the patient's ejection fraction in ten years.
      - **Stratify before you scan.** The pretest probability of disease decides
      what
        the test means. A positive stress test in a low-risk 30-year-old is mostly a
        false positive; the same result in a diabetic smoker is a culprit lesion.
      - **Treat the patient's risk, not their cholesterol number.** Statins help
      by
        absolute risk reduction; a high LDL in a low-risk person and a "normal" LDL in
        a post-MI patient call for opposite decisions.
      - **The ECG is interpreted with the patient, never alone.** ST elevation
      in a
        pain-free athlete may be early repolarization; the same tracing with crushing
        pain is an artery to open now.
      - **Rate, rhythm, and anticoagulation are three separate decisions in
      AF.** Don't
        conflate controlling the rate, restoring the rhythm, and preventing the stroke.
      - **The murmur is a question, the echo is the answer.** Auscultate to know
      which
        valve to image, then quantify what your ears suspected.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The ischemic cascade.** Coronary supply-demand mismatch produces a
      fixed
        sequence: perfusion defect first, then diastolic then systolic dysfunction,
        then ECG changes, and only last the chest pain. This is why a stress echo or
        perfusion scan catches ischemia the resting ECG and the patient's symptoms
        miss — you're imaging an earlier rung of the ladder.
      - **Risk stratification as the organizing act.** Framingham, ASCVD
      pooled-cohort,
        CHA2DS2-VASc for stroke, HAS-BLED for bleeding, GRACE and TIMI for acute
        coronary syndromes, the Wells-equivalent gestalt — every cardiology decision is
        a probability of a future event weighed against the cost of preventing it.
      - **Preload, afterload, contractility (the Frank-Starling and
      pressure-volume
        view).** Heart failure management is hemodynamics: is this patient wet or dry,
        warm or cold? The four quadrants dictate diuretics, vasodilators, or inotropes.
      - **Supply and demand.** Angina is the heart asking for more oxygen than
      the
        narrowed artery can deliver. You can open the supply (revascularize) or lower
        the demand (beta-blockade, rate control) — and stable disease often does better
        with the latter.
      - **Reentry vs. automaticity vs. triggered activity.** Arrhythmias are not
      one
        thing; the mechanism dictates whether you ablate a circuit, suppress a focus,
        or fix the metabolic trigger.
      - **The vulnerable plaque, not the tight stenosis.** Most MIs come from
      rupture
        of a non-flow-limiting plaque, not the 90% lesion the angiogram shows. This is
        why stenting stable lesions doesn't prevent infarcts the way statins and
        antiplatelets do.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      - A coronary either has enough flow for the demand placed on it or it
      doesn't;
        everything else is detail.
      - Dead myocardium does not regenerate; the entire urgency of acute
      cardiology is
        about preventing necrosis, not reversing it.
      - Every antithrombotic that prevents a clot also causes a bleed; the art
      is the
        net.
      - The heart fails forward and backward; symptoms tell you which side and
      which
        filling pressure.
      - A rhythm is only dangerous in the context of the heart it's beating in.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Is this an acute coronary syndrome until proven otherwise, and what's
      the time
        from symptom onset?
      - What is this patient's actual event risk over the next ten years, not
      just
        their numbers today?
      - Will revascularizing this lesion change the patient's symptoms or
      survival, or
        only the angiogram?
      - Is this heart failure preserved or reduced ejection fraction — because
      the
        evidence base diverges sharply?
      - What's the CHA2DS2-VASc, what's the bleeding risk, and does the net
      favor
        anticoagulation?
      - Is this syncope benign vasovagal or the herald of sudden cardiac death?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      - **STEMI vs. NSTEMI vs. unstable angina.** ST elevation means a vessel is
        occluded now: activate the cath lab, door-to-balloon under 90 minutes. NSTEMI
        is risk-stratified (GRACE) to early-invasive or conservative. The ECG and
        troponin trajectory drive the tempo.
      - **Revascularize vs. optimize medically.** For stable coronary disease,
        COURAGE and ISCHEMIA say medical therapy matches PCI for survival; intervene
        for refractory symptoms or high-risk anatomy (left main, three-vessel with low
        EF), where CABG often beats stents.
      - **Rate vs. rhythm control in AF.** AFFIRM showed no survival difference
      for
        most; rhythm control for the symptomatic or the young, rate control for the
        tolerant elderly — but anticoagulation is decided separately by stroke risk.
      - **Heart failure GDMT.** In reduced EF, layer the four pillars — ARNI,
        beta-blocker, MRA, SGLT2 inhibitor — titrated to target doses, because each
        reduces mortality and the benefit is additive.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      1. **Triage the chest pain.** ECG within 10 minutes, troponin, and the
      gestalt:
         is the artery closing now? STEMI bypasses everything to the cath lab.
      2. **History and exam.** Characterize the symptom, the risk factors, the
         functional capacity; auscultate for the murmur, gallop, and rub.
      3. **Stratify risk.** Apply the relevant score; estimate pretest
      probability
         before choosing a test.
      4. **Image and test selectively.** ECG, echo for structure and function,
      stress
         for inducible ischemia, angiography when the probability is high enough to act.
      5. **Decide the intervention.** Medical optimization, revascularization,
      ablation,
         or device — matched to the mechanism and the evidence.
      6. **Titrate and monitor.** Up-titrate GDMT against pressure, rate,
      potassium,
         and creatinine; recheck the echo to see if the muscle recovered.
      7. **Follow for life.** Coronary disease, heart failure, and AF are
      chronic;
         adjust as renal function, rhythm, and the patient's goals change.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Antiplatelet/anticoagulant potency vs. bleeding.** Dual antiplatelet
      therapy
        and DOACs prevent thrombosis and cause hemorrhage; duration and intensity are a
        net-benefit calculation per patient.
      - **PCI now vs. CABG durability.** Stents are faster and less invasive;
      bypass
        is more durable in diabetics and complex disease. The Heart Team decides.
      - **Rate control simplicity vs. rhythm control symptom relief.** Restoring
      sinus
        feels better but carries procedural and drug risk.
      - **Aggressive diuresis vs. renal perfusion.** Drying out the congested
      patient
        relieves dyspnea but can tip the kidneys into injury.
      - **Detecting disease early vs. overdiagnosis.** Coronary calcium scoring
      and
        troponin sensitivity catch real disease and a flood of borderline findings that
        drive anxiety and downstream testing.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - New ST elevation with pain is a STEMI until an expert says otherwise —
      call
        the lab, don't wait for troponin.
      - A troponin that's rising is more dangerous than one that's high and
      flat.

      - Treat the patient who looks like they're in pulmonary edema before the
      chest
        film confirms it.
      - Syncope during exertion or while supine is cardiac until excluded;
      syncope
        standing in a hot church usually isn't.
      - A new murmur with fever is endocarditis until echo and cultures say no.

      - Don't start an antiarrhythmic without thinking about the QT and the
        proarrhythmia you might cause.
      - If the echo and the symptoms disagree, re-examine the patient and repeat
      the
        echo before chasing a third test.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      - **Anchoring on the atypical-pain bias.** Calling a real ACS "atypical"
      and
        discharging it, especially in women and diabetics whose presentations differ.
      - **Oculostenotic reflex.** Stenting every lesion you see on the angiogram
        because it's there, not because it's causing ischemia (skip the FFR/iFR).
      - **Forgetting anticoagulation is a separate decision in AF.** Controlling
      the
        rate and leaving the patient unprotected from stroke.
      - **Under-titrating heart failure therapy.** Starting the four pillars at
      low
        dose and never reaching the doses that reduced mortality in the trials.
      - **Chasing the troponin without the story.** Treating a demand-ischemia
      troponin
        bump in sepsis as if it were a coronary occlusion.
      - **Ignoring the right ventricle.** Tunnel vision on the left heart while
      the RV
        fails in PE or inferior MI.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Stenting stable single-vessel disease for prognosis** when the
      evidence says
        it only treats symptoms.
      - **The reflexive stress test** in someone whose pretest probability is so
      low or
        so high the result won't change management.
      - **Polypharmacy without deprescribing** in the elderly, where the regimen
      causes
        more falls and bleeds than the disease.
      - **Reading the ECG without the patient** and over-calling benign
      variants.

      - **Treating diastolic dysfunction with the systolic playbook**, applying
      reduced-EF
        drugs to preserved-EF physiology where they don't help.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **STEMI / NSTEMI** — heart attack with / without ST-segment elevation,
      the
        divide that sets reperfusion urgency.
      - **Ejection fraction** — the percent of blood the left ventricle ejects
      per
        beat; the core measure of systolic function.
      - **Ischemia vs. infarction** — reversible oxygen starvation vs.
      irreversible
        muscle death.
      - **Door-to-balloon time** — minutes from arrival to opening the occluded
      artery.

      - **CHA2DS2-VASc / HAS-BLED** — the stroke-risk and bleeding-risk scores
      in AF.

      - **GDMT** — guideline-directed medical therapy, the mortality-reducing
      drug
        regimen.
      - **FFR / iFR** — fractional flow reserve; whether a stenosis actually
      limits flow.

      - **Regurgitation / stenosis** — a valve that leaks vs. one that won't
      open.

      - **Inotropy / chronotropy** — contractile force vs. heart rate.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      - **The 12-lead ECG** — the fastest, cheapest window on ischemia and
      rhythm.

      - **Echocardiography** — bedside imaging of structure, function, and
      valves;
        the cardiologist's stethoscope made visible.
      - **Cardiac catheterization and angiography** — the definitive coronary
      map and
        the route to PCI.
      - **Stress testing (exercise, nuclear, stress echo)** — provoking the
      ischemic
        cascade to reveal flow-limiting disease.
      - **Cardiac MRI and CT angiography** — tissue characterization and
      non-invasive
        coronary anatomy and calcium burden.
      - **Implantable devices (pacemakers, ICDs, CRT)** — pacing the slow heart,
        defibrillating the lethal rhythm, resynchronizing the failing one.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Cardiology runs on a Heart Team. The interventional cardiologist and the
      cardiac

      surgeon jointly decide PCI versus CABG for complex disease; treating
      either as

      the default is how patients get the wrong operation. The
      electrophysiologist owns

      the ablations and devices. Cardiac nurses and the cath-lab team execute
      the

      time-critical STEMI choreography where seconds count. The cardiologist
      consults to

      the emergency physician at the front door and to the intensivist for the
      patient

      in cardiogenic shock, and works with the anesthesiologist for procedural
      sedation

      and pre-operative cardiac risk clearance. The recurring friction is the
      chest pain

      handoff: the discipline is to communicate the troponin trajectory and the
      ECG

      evolution, not just a label.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Cardiology sits where a procedure can save a life and where the same
      procedure,

      done for the wrong indication, carries a financial incentive the patient
      can't

      see. The honest cardiologist refuses to stent a lesion that won't help the

      patient because the cath lab is profitable. Informed consent for
      anticoagulation

      means the patient understands they are trading a stroke risk for a bleed
      risk and

      gets to weigh it. End-of-life cardiology is its own hard ground:
      deactivating an

      ICD in a dying patient so they aren't shocked in their final hours,
      declining the

      fourth revascularization in advanced heart failure, and being honest that
      an LVAD

      or transplant has its own grueling course. The duty is to name the
      patient's real

      prognosis rather than offer one more procedure as a way of avoiding the

      conversation.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The 58-year-old diabetic with "indigestion."** She describes epigastric

      burning and nausea for an hour, no classic chest pain, and wants to go
      home. The

      trap is the atypical-presentation bias that misses MIs in women and
      diabetics.

      The ECG shows subtle ST depression in the lateral leads; the first
      troponin is

      borderline. The expert does not discharge. GRACE puts her at
      intermediate-high

      risk, so the plan is early-invasive: serial troponins rise, angiography
      shows a

      critical circumflex lesion, and PCI reopens it. The discipline that saved
      her was

      refusing to let an atypical story close a high-stakes differential.


      **The asymptomatic 90% LAD lesion found on a stress test.** A stable
      patient with

      controlled angina has a tight proximal LAD on angiography. The reflex —
      the

      oculostenotic reflex — is to stent it. The expert measures FFR, which
      comes back

      0.85, meaning the lesion isn't flow-limiting. ISCHEMIA and COURAGE say
      stenting

      won't improve his survival or, with mild symptoms, his life. The decision
      is to

      optimize medical therapy: high-intensity statin, antiplatelet,
      beta-blocker, and

      risk-factor control. Leaving the stent on the shelf is the skilled act.


      **New atrial fibrillation in an 82-year-old after a fall.** He's in AF at
      130,

      asymptomatic at rest. Three decisions, kept separate: rate control with a

      beta-blocker brings him to 80; rhythm control is deferred because he's
      tolerant

      and elderly (AFFIRM); and anticoagulation is decided on its own —
      CHA2DS2-VASc of

      5 strongly favors a DOAC, but he has a recent fall and a HAS-BLED of 3.
      The expert

      doesn't reflexively withhold the anticoagulant for fall risk (the stroke
      he'd

      prevent outweighs the bleed from falls) but does treat the fall risk and
      choose

      the agent and dose accordingly.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      A cardiologist is a physician who specialized in the heart, so internal
      medicine

      is the foundation the discipline is built on. Cardiac surgeons resolve
      coronary

      and valve disease with the knife where catheters can't reach, and the two
      decide

      together. Emergency physicians compress the same acute-coronary reasoning
      into

      the first minutes at the front door. Radiologists share the interpretation
      of

      cardiac CT and MRI. Anesthesiologists partner on procedural sedation and

      pre-operative cardiac risk. The registered nurse in the cath lab and CCU
      is the

      cardiologist's continuous eyes on the unstable patient.
  - heading: References
    markdown: |-
      - *Braunwald's Heart Disease: A Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicine*
      - *Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine* (cardiovascular section)
      - ACC/AHA Clinical Practice Guidelines
      - *The ESC Textbook of Cardiovascular Medicine*
      - *Marriott's Practical Electrocardiography*
