Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When
Ejection fraction testing is something you might need if your doctor suspects your heart isn’t pumping as efficiently as it should. This measurement becomes particularly important if you have symptoms that suggest heart problems or if you’re already at risk for heart conditions.[1]
You should consider getting your ejection fraction checked if you experience certain warning signs. These include feeling unusually tired without a clear reason, developing shortness of breath during activities you could previously handle easily, or noticing swelling in your legs, ankles, or belly. Some people also feel their heart fluttering or racing, lose their appetite without explanation, or find themselves becoming nauseous more often than usual.[12]
People who have already been diagnosed with heart conditions need regular ejection fraction monitoring. If you’ve had a heart attack, live with coronary artery disease, have been told you have heart valve disease, or suffer from high blood pressure, your healthcare provider will likely want to track your ejection fraction over time. This measurement helps them understand how your heart is responding to treatment and whether your condition is stable, improving, or getting worse.[1]
Even if you feel perfectly fine, your doctor might recommend ejection fraction testing if you have risk factors for heart disease. Conditions like diabetes, a history of smoking, or a family background of heart problems can make it wise to get baseline measurements. This way, if changes occur later, your medical team will have something to compare against.[5]
The timing of these tests matters too. If you have heart failure, you should expect to have your condition monitored at least every six months. These regular check-ins help your care team spot problems early and adjust your treatment before things get worse. Between scheduled appointments, you might be asked to watch for changes yourself, such as sudden weight gain, which could signal fluid buildup and require prompt attention.[19]
Diagnostic Methods: How Ejection Fraction Is Measured
Measuring ejection fraction requires looking inside your heart to see how it’s working, but doctors have several ways to do this without surgery. Each method has its own advantages, and your healthcare provider will choose the one that best fits your situation.[7]
Echocardiogram: The Most Common Approach
An echocardiogram, often simply called an “echo,” is the test most people get when their ejection fraction needs measuring. This test works similarly to the ultrasound used to check on babies during pregnancy. A technologist places a handheld device called a transducer on your chest, and it sends sound waves through your body. These waves bounce off your heart structures and return to create moving pictures on a screen.[5]
The echocardiogram is popular because it’s widely available, relatively inexpensive, and doesn’t expose you to radiation. You simply lie down while the technologist moves the transducer around your chest to capture images from different angles. The test is painless and usually takes less than an hour. More advanced versions use three-dimensional imaging, which research suggests provides the most accurate readings of ejection fraction.[6]
Doctors consider the echocardiogram the standard test for measuring ejection fraction. It not only calculates how much blood your heart pumps but also shows the size and structure of your heart chambers, how your heart valves are working, and how blood flows through your heart. This comprehensive view helps identify problems beyond just pumping efficiency.[13]
Cardiac MRI: High-Precision Imaging
A cardiac MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) uses powerful magnets, radio waves, and a computer to create detailed pictures of your heart. During this test, you lie on a bed that slides into a large tube-shaped machine. The MRI can show incredibly precise images of your heart’s soft tissues and blood flow patterns.[5]
While an MRI takes longer than an echocardiogram and costs more, it excels at providing accurate measurements and detailed views of heart muscle. This makes it particularly useful when doctors need extremely precise ejection fraction numbers or want to examine specific areas of heart muscle for damage or scarring. The test is safe and doesn’t use radiation, though people with certain metal implants like some pacemakers may not be able to have one.[6]
Nuclear Medicine Scans: Tracking Blood Flow
Nuclear medicine tests, sometimes called MUGA scans (multigated acquisition scan) or nuclear stress tests, involve injecting a small amount of radioactive material into your vein. This substance is safe and temporary—it leaves your body naturally within a few days. As it travels through your heart, a special camera takes pictures of your heartbeats, creating a movie of your heart in action.[5]
These scans are particularly good at measuring how much blood leaves your heart with each beat. They can also show whether all parts of your heart muscle are receiving adequate blood flow, which helps doctors understand if blood vessel blockages might be causing problems. The radioactive dose is low, and serious side effects are extremely rare.[6]
Cardiac Catheterization: Direct Measurement
Cardiac catheterization is a more invasive procedure where your doctor inserts a thin, hollow tube called a catheter into a large blood vessel, usually in your groin or arm. The catheter is carefully threaded through your blood vessels until it reaches your heart. Once there, it can directly measure pressures inside your heart chambers and calculate ejection fraction.[5]
During catheterization, doctors often inject a special dye that shows up on X-rays, allowing them to see how blood flows through your heart and whether any arteries are blocked. This test is typically reserved for situations where other tests haven’t provided enough information or when doctors need to check for blockages in your heart’s blood vessels at the same time they’re measuring ejection fraction.[6]
Understanding the Results
All these tests calculate ejection fraction as a percentage. To understand what this percentage means, think about how your heart works: when your heart contracts, it doesn’t pump out all the blood it contains—some always stays behind. Ejection fraction tells you what portion of the blood in your heart’s main pumping chamber, called the left ventricle, gets pushed out with each heartbeat.[1]
The formula doctors use divides the volume of blood pumped out (called stroke volume) by the total volume of blood in the ventricle before it contracts (called end-diastolic volume), then multiplies by 100 to get a percentage. In simpler terms, if your heart holds 100 milliliters of blood and pumps out 60 milliliters with each beat, your ejection fraction is 60%.[1]
In a healthy heart, the ejection fraction typically ranges between 50% and 70%. Different sources cite slightly varying ranges—some say 52% to 72% for males and 54% to 74% for females, while others use 55% to 70% as the normal range. These small differences reflect natural variation between people and different measurement methods, but they all point to the same basic conclusion: a healthy heart pumps out at least half its blood with each beat.[1][6]
Numbers below 50% generally indicate the heart muscle is weakened and not pumping as efficiently as it should. An ejection fraction between 41% and 49% is considered mildly reduced, while 30% to 40% is moderately reduced. Measurements below 30% are severely reduced and indicate the heart is significantly struggling. An ejection fraction around 20% means the heart is pumping only about one-third of the blood it should, which can lead to serious problems.[1][4]
Distinguishing Different Heart Problems
Ejection fraction measurements help doctors figure out what type of heart problem you might have. When your ejection fraction is low, it usually means your heart muscle has been weakened by conditions like previous heart attacks, diseases of the heart muscle called cardiomyopathy, long-term high blood pressure, or problems with your heart valves that make them leak or not open properly.[12]
Different patterns of results can point to specific problems. For example, if your ejection fraction is normal but you still have heart failure symptoms like shortness of breath and swelling, this suggests your heart muscle has become stiff rather than weak. If your ejection fraction is severely reduced, doctors will look more carefully for evidence of previous heart attacks or diseases that specifically damage heart muscle cells.[5]
Sometimes doctors focus on the right ventricular ejection fraction instead of the more commonly measured left side. The right side of your heart pumps blood to your lungs to pick up oxygen, while the left side pumps oxygen-rich blood to the rest of your body. Right-sided measurements become important when doctors suspect problems specific to the right side of your heart or your lungs, though these conditions are less common than left-sided heart problems.[1]
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
When researchers design clinical trials to test new treatments for heart conditions, they need to carefully select which patients can participate. Ejection fraction measurements play a crucial role in determining who qualifies for these studies. Researchers use specific ejection fraction ranges to identify patients who might benefit from experimental treatments while ensuring the trial results will be meaningful and applicable to real-world patients.[7]
Most clinical trials for heart failure treatments divide patients into groups based on their ejection fraction category. Trials might specifically enroll only patients with reduced ejection fraction, typically defined as below 40%, because these patients face the highest risk and might benefit most from new therapies. Other trials focus on people with mid-range ejection fraction, usually between 40% and 49%, or those with preserved ejection fraction above 50%. Each group represents different underlying heart problems and may respond differently to treatments.[10]
Before you can join a heart failure clinical trial, you’ll usually need to have your ejection fraction measured using one of the standard methods described earlier, most commonly an echocardiogram. The trial protocol will specify exactly how recently this test must have been performed—often within the past few months—to ensure your current heart function matches the study’s requirements. Some trials require that measurements be confirmed at specialized centers using standardized techniques to maintain consistency across all participants.[7]
Clinical trials don’t rely on ejection fraction alone to determine eligibility. Researchers also consider other factors like your symptoms, how well you can perform daily activities, what medications you’re already taking, and whether you have other health conditions. Blood tests checking your kidney function, levels of certain hormones that indicate heart stress, and markers of inflammation often form part of the screening process. These additional tests help researchers understand the full picture of your heart health and predict how you might respond to the experimental treatment.[7]
During a clinical trial, your ejection fraction will be measured multiple times to track whether the experimental treatment is helping your heart function improve, stay stable, or decline. These repeated measurements at specified intervals allow researchers to objectively assess whether a new medication or device is working as hoped. The consistency of measurement methods throughout the trial is critically important, which is why many trials require that all echocardiograms or other tests be read by a single central laboratory rather than by local technicians at different sites.[7]
Some specialized trials test devices like implantable defibrillators or cardiac resynchronization therapy, which are designed to help hearts with very low ejection fractions pump more effectively. These trials typically require an ejection fraction below 35% or even 30% for enrollment because patients with such severe reductions face the highest risk of dangerous heart rhythms or death. The goal is to study whether these devices can prevent life-threatening complications in the patients who need them most.[12]



