Cardiac Catheterization
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More Specific Terms
Introduction
- Passage of a catheter into the heart through a blood vessel leading to the heart for the purpose of measuring intracardiac pressure abnormalities, obtaining cardiac blood samples, &/or imaging cardiac structures by injection of radio- opaque dye.
Indications
- (applications)
- treatment of coronary stenosis/ occlusions
- percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty ( PTCA)
- laser techniques
- intravascular coronary stents
- atherectomy
- treatment of valvular stenoses
- balloon valvuloplasty ( aortic, mitral, pulmonic)
- treatment of congenital heart disease
- atrial septostomy
- umbrella closure of patent ductus arteriosus & defects in atrial or ventricular septum
- coil closure of undesired collateral vessels
Contraindications
- (relative)
- uncontrolled ventricular irritability
- increased risk of ventricular tachycardia & fibrillation
- uncorrected hypokalemia or digitalis toxicity
- uncorrected hypertension
- predisposes to myocardial ischemia &/or heart failure
- intercurrent febrile illness
- decompenstated heart failure, especially pulmonary edema unless catheterization can be done with patient sitting up
- anticoagulation; PT > 18 seconds
- severe allergy to radiographic contrast agent
- severe renal insufficiency &/or anuria, unless dialysis is planned to remove fluid & radiographic contrast load
Procedure
- Advantages:
- direct measurement of intracardiac pressures
- contrast angiography provides visualization of cardiac anatomy
- allows percutaneous intervention for structure heart disease with intracardiac echocardiographic guidance [1]
- Disadvantages
- invasive
- radiation exposure
- images are not tomographic, limiting 3-dimensional visualization [1]
More General Terms
Additional Terms
- coronary angiography
- hemodynamic monitoring
- percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA, percutaneous coronary intervention, PCI)
- Swan-Ganz catheter (pulmonary artery catheter)
References
- Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 11, 15 American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 1998, 2009
- Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 13th ed. Isselbacher et al (eds), McGraw-Hill Inc. NY, 1994, pg 980, 986
