Angioplasty (Also known as Percutaneous Coronary
Interventions [PCI], Balloon Angioplasty
and Coronary Artery Balloon Dilation)
Special tubing with an
attached deflated balloon is threaded up
to the coronary arteries. The balloon
Is inflated to widen blocked areas where
blood flow to the heart muscle has been
reduced or cutoff.
Often combined with implantation
of a stent
to help prop the artery open and decrease
the chance of another blockage.
Considered less invasive because the body is not cut open.
Lasts from 30 minutes to several hours. Often requires an overnight hospital stay.
Greatly increases blood flow through the blocked artery.
Decreases chest pain (angina).
Increases ability for physical activity.
Reduces risk of a heart attack.
Can also be used to open neck and brain arteries to help prevent stroke.
An incision is made on the left breast to expose the heart. Then, a laser is used to drill a series of holes from the outside of the heart into the heart's pumping chamber. In some patients TMR is combined with bypass surgery. In those cases an incision through the breastbone is used for the bypass.
Usually requires a hospital stay.
Used to relieve severe chest pain (angina) in very ill patients who aren’t candidates for bypass surgery or angioplasty.
Treats blocked heart arteries by creating new passages for blood to flow to your heart muscle. It works by taking arteries or veins from other parts of your body — called grafts — and using them to reroute the blood around the clogged artery.
A patient may undergo one, two, three or more bypass grafts, depending on how many coronary arteries are blocked.
Requires several days in the hospital.
One of the most common and effective procedures to manage blockage of blood to the heart muscle.
Improves the supply of blood and oxygen to the heart.
Relieves chest pain (angina).
Reduces risk of heart attack.
Improves ability for physical activity.
Minimally
Invasive Heart Surgery
(Also known as Limited Access Coronary
Artery Surgery and includes Port-Access
Coronary Artery Bypass (PACAB or PortCAB)
and Minimally Invasive Coronary Artery
Bypass Graft (MIDCAB)
An alternative to standard bypass surgery (CABG). Small incisions ("ports") are made in the chest. Chest arteries or veins from your leg are attached to the heart to "bypass" the clogged coronary artery or arteries. The instruments are passed through the ports to perform the bypasses. The surgeon views these operations on video monitors rather than directly.
In PACAB, the heart is stopped and blood is pumped through an oxygenator or "heart-lung" machine.
MIDCAB is used to avoid the heart-lung machine. It's done while the heart is still beating. Requires several days in the hospital.
Manages blockage of blood flow to the heart and improves the supply of blood and oxygen to the heart.
A catheter with an electrode at its tip is guided through the veins to the heart muscle with real-time, moving X-rays (fluoroscopy) displayed on a video screen. The catheter is placed at the exact site inside the heart where cells give off the electrical signals that stimulate the abnormal heart rhythm. Then a mild, painless radiofrequency energy (similar to microwave heat) is transmitted to the pathway. This destroys carefully selected heart muscle cells in a very small area (about 1/5 of an inch).
An experimental
procedure in which skeletal muscles are
taken from a patient's back or abdomen.
Then they're wrapped around an ailing heart.
This added muscle, aided by ongoing stimulation
from a device similar to a pacemaker, may
boost the heart's pumping motion.