Our Services: Vascular Health

Our heart health services include advanced diagnostics, personalized treatment plans, and ongoing support to manage and prevent cardiovascular disease. We prioritize your heart’s wellness through innovative care and lifestyle guidance.

Innovative Care for Your Heart's Wellness

Consultative Services

Vessel Health offers a menu of evaluative services that are tailored to a particular patients needs. Some target the understanding of a particular disease process, others are useful in the more generalized evaluation of cardiovascular risk and its mitigation.

Evaluation Services

1. Carotid, renal, aortic, lower extremity duplex scanning: The employment of ultrasound imaging technology to visualize arterial blood flow, vessel obstructions, as well as variants of normal anatomy.

2. Intimal–medial thickness (IMT) evaluation: The use of ultrasound technology to measure the thickening of the innermost layer of the artery which is an index of the atherosclerotic process.

3. Vasoreactivity Assessment: An assessment of vascular tone, useful in blood pressure management, and to assist in risk-factor profiling.

4. Ankle–Brachial Index Measurement: A simple evaluation which compares the blood pressure in a patient’s arms to that in his/her legs. Normally higher, a decrement in leg blood pressure is a reliable measurement of atherosclerotic burden in the leg arteries.

Therapy Services

Blood Pressure Adjustment: Vessel Health offers consultative input in the management of patients whose blood pressure is difficult to control. Traditional “western” medications may be supplemented with more natural therapies including stress management, yoga, and homeopathic remedies.

Angiography: Similar to the procedure useful in the coronary arteries, angiography provides a detailed understanding of the arterial anatomy. Most any arterial bed, accessible with an angiographic catheter, can be visualized.  The information obtained in this outpatient hospital procedure may be vital to the medical and surgical care of a patient.
Referrals for Angioplasty and Stent Placement as needed: Certain peripheral vascular disease processes lend themselves to balloon dilatation (angioplasty), or more definitive placement of a supportive metal structure (stent). Stent technology has now proven useful in carotid artery obstructions, aortic aneurysms, renal artery stenoses, and blockages in the larger leg arteries.

The Arterial System

Purpose:

The arterial system is composed of a sophisticated network of “high pressure,” thick walled and flexible channels that serve as the conduits supplying blood to all of our tissues. Known as arteries, arterioles and capillaries, these vessels are not only susceptible to normal aging processes such as enhanced stiffness, but are particularly vulnerable to the atherosclerotic process which is brought on by lifestyle indiscretion.

Carotid: The left and right Carotid arteries arise from the thoracic aorta close to its origin near the heart. Dividing in half near the jaw, each supplies one half of the face and hemisphere of the brain. It is at the division point that blood flow eddies often commence deposition of plaque, which when significant are audible to the physicians stethoscope and visible with ultrasound or other imaging modalities. Identification of plaque before clinical events such as stroke is imperative.

Aorta:  Arising from the heart at the aortic valve, the aorta is the largest vessel in our bodies. The coronary arteries, arteries to our arms, brain, spinal cord, gut, kidneys and legs all branch from the aorta. Dissimilar from other arteries, the aorta is more prone to distention and dilatation or so called aneurysm formation. Early detection of aneurysms prevents the disastrous consequences of rupture.

Renal: Each kidney is supplied by a rather large artery, ranging in caliber from 4 to 10 millimeters. These vessels in concert with the very fine capillaries in the kidney bed are responsible for regulation of our blood pressure. The capillaries are also involved in the excretory function of the kidney and can be adversely affected by such problems as diabetes mellitus.

Lower Extremities: The arteries to the lower extremities each branch from the aorta in the mid abdomen. After giving off several other arterioles in the pelvis, they supply the thigh and lower leg again with many subdivisions. The pulse in the groin or around the ankles is evidence of their function. Smoking is particularly hazardous and can yield extensive occlusions in some cases.

Problems

Stroke: Stroke is perhaps the most feared medical condition facing humans, and has gained significantly in public awareness. Strokes fall in to two types; 1) Hemorrhagic = direct bleeding in the brain tissue induced by such conditions as excessive hypertension, and 2) Ischemic = occlusion of a vessel providing cerebral blood flow with attendant cell death. Ischemic strokes are precipitated either through the embolic deposition of debris or through a lack of blood flow due to the progressive impedance of a prominent plaque.

Aortic Aneurysm/Dissection: Weakening of the layered wall of the aorta is often due to a combination of infiltration of atherosclerotic debris coupled with the force of poorly controlled blood pressure. In its chronic form this yields gradual dilatation of the structure, especially in the abdominal region. Aneurysms of over 5 centimeters raise concerns of rupture, which if acute often result in acute mortality. Similarly the hazard of death is high in aortic dissection which is more commonly evidenced in the portion of the aorta coursing through the chest cavity or thorax.  This too represents a medical emergency.

Renal Failure/Hypertension: Whether related to common lipid issues or the more devastating consequences of diabetes mellitus, obstruction of the kidney arteries or capillaries not only can affect the blood filtering function of the kidneys, but also their role in the regulation of vascular tone and blood pressure. Occasionally, an isolated renal artery plaque or stenosis is detected, which if relieved by such maneuvers as stent placement can improve kidney blood flow and hypertension. More commonly, medications may provide the only solution, unless the disease process has progressed to the point of requiring dialysis or the use of the artificial kidney.

Claudication: Discomfort or pain in the calves represents claudication and is the most common symptom of stenoses in the lower limb vessels. With smoking being a common precipitant, the disease process often may be diffuse and difficult to reverse or repair. Although angioplasty and stent application may prove effective in the short term, aggressive life style remediation is usually mandatory.

Discover Vessel Health

The cardiovascular system is at the center of our health. It nourishes and impacts each and every other system in our body. The vessels of our circulation carry the very life-force of our being to every part of our body,  the “vessel” that each one of us uses to live, love, and pursue happiness through each day of life.At Vessel Health, we take a comprehensive approach to well-being, focusing on the cardiovascular system. We are committed to optimizing not just the vessels of our circulation, but the “vessels” of our beings. We have developed consultative services, customized programs, and a comprehensive approach to health that will enable you to manage, treat, extend, and improve your life. Vessel Health founder Dr. Harvey White has spent years treating and counseling patients on cardiac issues throughout New Mexico and the Southwest.

Meet Dr. Harvey White

HARVEY J. WHITE, MD, FACC
Founder and Executive Director

For the past 35 years, Dr. White has dedicated himself to direct patient care, clinical research initiatives, and leadership activities designed to improve the cardiovascular health care system. Dr. White considers Vessel Health to be the culmination of a career in cardiac medicine. Grounded in extensive training and experience in interventional cardiology (the technique of coronary angioplasty and stent placement), Dr. White has concluded that we, as individuals and as a society, need to enhance our focus on prevention and a proactive approach to circulation and personal wellness. Vessel Health is an expression of that philosophy.