Percutaneous
Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA)
Why is the doctor performing this procedure?
To open up coronary (heart) arteries that are narrowed or
blocked by plaque build-up (atherosclerosis).
What is the procedure?
Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty is commonly
called PTCA, or just angioplasty. A catheter is inserted into
an artery--usually in the groin--but sometimes in the arm
or wrist. The catheter is advanced to the heart, and a series
of x-ray pictures (coronary angiogram) are taken to clearly
visualize the heart arteries that are narrowed. Then a balloon-tipped
catheter is advanced to the heart, and into the narrowed coronary
artery. Inside the artery, the balloon is inflated and deflated
several times, compressing the plaque against the artery wall
and widening the artery so blood flow improves.
X-rays pictures are repeated, and if the artery has been
successfully re-opened, the catheters are removed. Pressure
is applied to the puncture site (to stop bleeding) while the
patient rests quietly.
Where is the procedure performed?
In the Cardiac Catheterization Lab.
How long does this procedure take?
PTCA (angioplasty) usually takes 1-2 hours.
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