Abstract
Durable left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) are an established and highly effective therapy for patients with advanced heart failure. Ongoing technological improvements and structured follow-up programs have significantly enhanced device durability, reduced complications, and improved long-term survival. Consequently, a growing number of patients with LVAD support require long-term outpatient care and increasingly present to both specialized and non-specialized hospitals, including for admissions unrelated to heart failure. In this context, echocardiography plays a central role. It is essential not only for routine follow-up at dedicated LVAD clinics but also for the assessment of cardiac status during inpatient admissions for extracardiac conditions. However, echocardiographic evaluation in LVAD patients is technically demanding and requires a solid understanding of LVAD physiology, device-heart interactions, and the specific hemodynamic conditions of continuous-flow support. Without this knowledge, standard echocardiographic parameters may be misleading. This review provides sonographers and cardiologists with a practical, clinically oriented framework for routine transthoracic echocardiography in patients with durable LVAD support. We summarize key principles of LVAD hemodynamics, discuss interpretation of LVAD console parameters, propose a standardized imaging protocol, and outline a structured approach to common echocardiographic findings in routine ambulatory and inpatient settings.