Fractional Shortening & Ejection Fraction Calculator
Estimate left ventricular systolic performance using M-mode dimensions and/or ventricular volumes. This tool is for education and clinical support, not a stand-alone diagnosis.
Expert Guide to Fractional Shortening and Ejection Fraction Calculation
Fractional shortening (FS) and ejection fraction (EF) are cornerstone measures of left ventricular systolic function in echocardiography. While they are related, they are not identical, and understanding the calculation method, assumptions, and limitations is essential for safe interpretation. If you are a clinician, sonographer, trainee, or data analyst working with cardiology metrics, this guide gives you a practical and clinically grounded framework for evaluating FS and EF together.
In simple terms, both metrics describe how effectively the left ventricle contracts. FS measures the relative reduction in left ventricular internal diameter from diastole to systole. EF measures the proportion of blood volume ejected during systole. EF is usually the dominant clinical metric for heart failure classification and treatment pathways, but FS remains useful, especially in specific echo workflows and serial follow-up protocols.
Why these two measurements matter in daily cardiology practice
- Risk stratification: Lower EF correlates with increased risk of heart failure events, arrhythmias, and mortality in many cohorts.
- Therapy planning: Guideline-directed medical therapy in reduced EF heart failure is tied to EF thresholds.
- Monitoring treatment response: Serial EF and dimensions are used in cardiomyopathy, cardio-oncology, and valvular disease follow-up.
- Rapid echo screening: FS can be quickly obtained from linear dimensions, especially when full volumetric analysis is not available.
Core formulas used in fractional shortening ejection fraction calculation
1) Fractional Shortening (FS)
FS is computed from linear dimensions:
FS (%) = ((LVIDd – LVIDs) / LVIDd) × 100
Where:
- LVIDd: Left ventricular internal diameter at end-diastole
- LVIDs: Left ventricular internal diameter at end-systole
Because FS depends on a one-dimensional measurement, it assumes geometry and regional wall motion symmetry. That means FS can be misleading in ventricles with segmental dysfunction, aneurysm, or unusual geometry.
2) Ejection Fraction (EF) from volumes
The direct volume-based formula is:
EF (%) = ((EDV – ESV) / EDV) × 100
- EDV: End-diastolic volume
- ESV: End-systolic volume
This is generally preferred because it reflects actual chamber volume change rather than only linear shortening. In routine transthoracic echocardiography, biplane Simpson method is commonly used for EDV and ESV.
3) Ejection Fraction estimated from M-mode dimensions (Teichholz approach)
When only linear dimensions are available, an EF estimate can be derived by converting diameters into approximate volumes:
- EDV ≈ 7 / (2.4 + LVIDd) × LVIDd3
- ESV ≈ 7 / (2.4 + LVIDs) × LVIDs3
- EF = ((EDV – ESV) / EDV) × 100
This approach is useful in selected contexts but should be interpreted carefully when ventricular geometry is nonuniform.
Reference ranges and classification benchmarks
Different societies and publications use slightly different boundaries, but the ranges below align with commonly used adult echocardiography standards and heart failure frameworks.
| Metric | Normal | Mildly Reduced | Moderately Reduced | Severely Reduced |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LVEF (men, %) | 52 to 72 | 41 to 51 | 30 to 40 | < 30 |
| LVEF (women, %) | 54 to 74 | 41 to 53 | 30 to 40 | < 30 |
| Fractional Shortening (%, adults) | 25 to 43 | 20 to 24 | 15 to 19 | < 15 |
For heart failure phenotype language, many clinicians apply:
- HFrEF: LVEF ≤ 40%
- HFmrEF: LVEF 41 to 49%
- HFpEF: LVEF ≥ 50%
Practical step-by-step interpretation workflow
- Confirm image quality and timing: End-diastole and end-systole points must be correctly captured.
- Check for measurement plausibility: LVIDs should be smaller than LVIDd; ESV should be lower than EDV.
- Compute FS and EF: Use direct volume EF when available; use dimension-based estimates cautiously.
- Compare with reference ranges: Classify as normal or reduced severity.
- Integrate context: Symptoms, blood pressure, rhythm, valvular lesions, and regional wall motion findings change interpretation.
- Trend over time: Serial change is often more meaningful than one isolated value.
Where FS and EF can disagree and why
It is not unusual to see FS and EF diverge. Reasons include geometric assumptions, loading conditions, and regional motion patterns. For example, a patient with basal hyperkinesis and apical akinesis can show deceptively preserved linear shortening in one view while global volumetric EF is lower. Similarly, concentric hypertrophy can alter dimensional relationships and distort FS interpretation relative to true chamber emptying.
Another source of divergence is measurement technique. Small differences in caliper placement can materially change FS because it is a ratio of two diameters. EF from Simpson method has its own variability, especially with endocardial border definition issues, but generally tracks global function better when acquisition is good.
Data table: clinically useful statistics and prevalence context
| Population or Metric | Statistic | Clinical Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| US adults living with heart failure | About 6.7 million (2020 estimate) | Large population burden makes EF classification central to public health and care planning. |
| HF phenotype distribution in contemporary cohorts | HFpEF approximately 50%, HFrEF approximately 40%, HFmrEF approximately 10% (varies by study) | Many patients have preserved EF, so normal or near-normal EF does not exclude symptomatic heart failure. |
| Inter-observer variability in echocardiographic LVEF | Often around 5 to 10 EF points depending on method and image quality | Serial trend and standardized acquisition are crucial before changing treatment based on one value. |
Common pitfalls in fractional shortening ejection fraction calculation
- Unit mismatch: Mixing mm and cm can produce major errors. Always standardize units before computing.
- Incorrect cycle timing: Measurements outside true end-diastole and end-systole underestimate function.
- Arrhythmia effects: Atrial fibrillation and ectopy can distort beat-to-beat measurements; average multiple beats.
- Valvular disease confounding: Severe mitral regurgitation can maintain a seemingly preserved EF despite impaired forward output.
- Relying on one number: EF and FS should be interpreted with stroke volume, chamber size, and clinical signs.
How to use this calculator responsibly
This calculator supports three workflows: dimensions only, volumes only, or both. In “both” mode, you can compare EF derived from measured volumes against EF estimated by Teichholz from LVID values. If those values are close, confidence may increase. If they diverge significantly, reassessment of acquisition quality or geometric assumptions is warranted.
The chart visualizes your computed FS and EF against commonly used lower normal cutoffs. This is intentionally simple: it is for quick interpretation and communication, not complete hemodynamic profiling.
Authoritative references and further reading
For evidence-based definitions, method standards, and epidemiology, review these sources:
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI): Heart Failure Overview
- NCBI Bookshelf (NIH): Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction Clinical Review
- CDC: Heart Failure Burden and Public Health Information
Bottom line
Fractional shortening and ejection fraction calculation is most powerful when done with correct measurement technique, method awareness, and context-based interpretation. FS offers speed and continuity with legacy echo workflows. EF, especially volume-based EF, offers broader clinical utility for diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment decisions. Use both thoughtfully, trend values over time, and always reconcile numbers with symptoms and full imaging findings.