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Coronary
Angioplasty
Coronary angioplasty is a medical
procedure in which narrowed arteries that supply blood
to the heart muscle are widened. This allows for
improved flow of blood through these arteries to the
heart, without the need for open-heart
surgery.
The purpose of angioplasty is to widen narrowed or
blocked arteries, so that enough blood can get to the
heart to deliver the oxygen it needs to function
properly.
- Angioplasty is designed
to relieve the chest pain a person usually feels when
the heart is not getting enough blood and oxygen.
- Angioplasty can also
reduce the risk of having a heart attack in someone
with severely narrowed arteries in the heart.
Coronary is from the Latin word for 'crown'. The
arteries that supply the heart muscle with blood are
known as the coronary arteries since they surround the
heart like a crown. 'Angio' is from the Greek word for
vessel, and 'plasty' is from the Greek word for
shaping.
Arteries become narrowed by a build-up of fat and
cholesterol called plaque and is a sign of
coronary artery disease.
In
an angioplasty:
- A specially trained
doctor inserts a long, narrow tube (called a catheter)
through a small cut in the thigh or the arm.
- The doctor threads the
catheter through blood vessels leading to the heart
until it reaches the narrowed part of the artery.
- The doctor positions a
tiny balloon that is attached to the tip of the
catheter right at site of the narrowing, and then
inflates it with air. The pressure of the balloon
flattens the plaque and allows the artery to open
wider.
- Often, a tiny wire tube
called a stent is left inside the artery to
hold it open.
Sometimes, instead of flattening the plaque with a
balloon, other angioplasty methods are used:
- Atherectomy is a form of
angioplasty that uses tiny blades or a drill-like tip
on the end of the catheter to cut away or drill
through the plaque.
- Laser angioplasty uses
laser energy to destroy plaque.
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