Abstract Rodent models of cardiac pathophysiology represent a valuable research tool to investigate mechanism of disease as well as test new therapeutics
1 Echocardiography provides a powerful, non-invasive tool to serially assess cardiac morphometry and function in a living animal
2 However, using this technique on mice poses unique challenges owing to the small size and rapid heart rate of these animals
3 Until recently, few ultrasound systems were capable of performing quality echocardiography on mice, and those generally lacked the image resolution and frame rate necessary to obtain truly quantitative measurements
Newly released systems such as the VisualSonics Vevo2100 provide new tools for researchers to carefully and non-invasively investigate cardiac function in mice
This system