Heart Health · 6 min read

Echocardiogram vs. EKG: What's the Difference and Which One Do You Actually Need?

Your doctor orders a heart test and suddenly you're trying to understand the difference between an EKG, an echocardiogram, a stress test, and a Holter monitor. These are all legitimate diagnostic tools — but they answer very different questions. Understanding the distinction can help you advocate for the right test at the right time.

By Emanuel Papadakis, RDCS, RVT

February 2025
ARDMS Certified Sonographer
ASE Member — Echo Standards
IAC Accredited — Echo & Vascular
Board-Certified Cardiologist Review

When people think of a heart test, they usually picture one of two things: the EKG with the lines running across the paper, or the ultrasound machine with the picture of the heart on the screen. These tests are frequently confused and sometimes assumed to be interchangeable. They are not. They measure entirely different things, and understanding the difference helps you know which one you actually need.

Medical ultrasound transducer next to cardiac monitoring device showing heart waveforms

What an EKG (Electrocardiogram) Measures

An EKG records the electrical activity of the heart. Twelve electrode patches applied to the skin detect tiny electrical impulses that travel through the cardiac conduction system with each heartbeat. The resulting waveform reveals rate, rhythm, and conduction abnormalities: whether the heart is beating too fast or too slow, whether there is a block in the electrical pathway, whether atrial fibrillation is present, and whether the pattern of electrical activation suggests a prior heart attack or current ischemia.

An EKG is fast, inexpensive, and excellent for what it measures. It is the right tool for diagnosing arrhythmias, detecting acute coronary events in the emergency setting, screening for conduction disease, and measuring QT intervals before starting certain medications. It takes approximately two minutes to perform.

What an Echocardiogram Measures

An echocardiogram uses ultrasound to create real-time images of the heart in motion. It measures structure and function, not electrical activity. Ejection fraction, valve anatomy, wall motion, chamber dimensions, diastolic function, pericardial fluid, and pulmonary pressures are all assessed by echo. An EKG cannot provide any of this information.

A person can have a perfectly normal EKG and simultaneously have severe aortic stenosis, a dilated cardiomyopathy with reduced ejection fraction, or a significant pericardial effusion. Conversely, someone with a markedly abnormal EKG can have a structurally normal heart on echo. The two tests address different questions entirely.

One analogy: an EKG is like measuring the electrical system in a building. An echocardiogram is like inspecting the walls, roof, plumbing, and structural integrity. Both matter. They tell you nothing about each other.

When You Need an EKG

When You Need an Echocardiogram

Can You Have Both?

Yes, and frequently both are appropriate. Many cardiologists order both tests together because they provide complementary information. The EKG tells them about rhythm and conduction. The echo tells them about structure and function. Together they give a more complete picture than either alone.

For preventive screening purposes, however, most people who feel well and want to understand their cardiovascular baseline will gain more actionable information from an echocardiogram than from an EKG. A normal EKG in a healthy person is reassuring but limited. A normal echo provides direct evidence that the heart structure and function are intact.

BlackPoint performs echocardiograms at your home with results from a board-certified cardiologist within 24 to 48 hours. $397 all-inclusive, no referral required. If your physician has ordered both, we can accommodate and coordinate.

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