Cardiac catheterization is done in a hospital.
During the procedure, you'll be kept on your back and awake. This allows you to
follow your doctor's instructions during the procedure. You'll be given
medicine to help you relax, which may make you sleepy.
Your doctor will numb the area on the arm, groin
(upper thigh), or neck where the catheter will enter your blood vessel. A
needle is used to make a small hole in the blood vessel. Through this hole your
doctor will put a tapered tube called a sheath.
Next, your doctor will put a thin, flexible wire
through the sheath and into your blood vessel. This guide wire is then threaded
through your blood vessel to your heart. The wire helps your doctor position
the catheter correctly. Your doctor then puts a catheter through the sheath and
slides it over the guide wire and into the coronary arteries.
Special x-ray movies are taken of the guide wire and
the catheter as they're moved into the heart. The movies help your doctor see
where to position the tip of the catheter.
When the catheter reaches the right spot, your
doctor will use it to do tests or treatments on your heart. For example, your
doctor may do
angioplasty
and
stenting.
The animation below shows the process of cardiac
catheterization. Click the "start" button to play the animation. Written and
spoken explanations are provided with each frame. Use the buttons in the lower
right corner to pause, restart, or replay the animation, or use the scroll bar
below the buttons to move through the frames.
The animation shows the step-by-step
process your doctor will follow to do cardiac catheterization.
During the procedure, your doctor may put a special
dye in the catheter. This dye will flow through your bloodstream to your heart.
Once the dye reaches your heart, it will make the inside of your heart's
arteries show up on an x ray called an angiogram. This test is called
coronary
angiography.
Coronary angiography can show how well blood is
being pumped out of the heart's main pumping chambers, which are called
ventricles (VEN-trih-kuls). When the catheter is inside your heart, your doctor
may use it to take blood samples from different parts of the heart or to do
minor heart surgery.
To get a more detailed view of a blocked coronary
artery, your doctor may do intracoronary ultrasound. For this test, your doctor
will thread a tiny ultrasound device through the catheter and into the artery.
This device gives off sound waves that bounce off the artery wall (and its
blockage) to make an image of the inside of the artery.
If the angiogram or intracoronary ultrasound shows
blockages or other possible problems in the heart's arteries, your doctor may
use angioplasty to open the blocked arteries.
After your doctor does all of the needed tests or
treatments, he or she will pull back the catheter and take it out along with
the sheath. The opening left in the blood vessel will then be closed up and
bandaged. A small weight may be put on top of the bandage for a few hours to
apply more pressure. This will help prevent major bleeding from the site.