|
Why
is Angiograpy Done?
X-ray angiography
is performed to specifically image and diagnose diseases of the
blood vessels of the body, including the brain and heart.
Traditionally, angiography was used to diagnose pathology of
these vessels such as blockage caused by plaque build up. However
in recent decades, radiologists, cardiologists and vascular
surgeons have used the x-ray angiography procedure to guide
minimally invasive surgery of the blood vessels and arteries of
the heart. In the last several years, diagnostic vascular images
are often made using MR, CT and/or ultrasound and while x-ray
angiography is reserved for therapy.
Conventional
x-ray angiography has a lead role in the detection, diagnosis and
treatment of heart disease, heart
attack, acute stroke and vascular
disease which can lead to stroke.
What A Person Experiences, What to Expect During
an Angiography Examination
Most conventional
x-ray angiography procedures are similar.
-
Patient
preparation involves removing clothing and jewelry and wearing
a patient gown. In all cases, angiography requires that
intravenous contrast is
administered. For interventional or therapeutic angiography, a
small incision is made in the groin or arm so that a catheter
can be inserted during the study.
-
The patient is
positioned on the examination table by the technologist so that
the anatomy of interest (e.g. leg artery) is in the proper
field of view between the x-ray tube and image
intensifier.
|
The
doctor and technologist assure a patient before
angiography
|
-
The
technologist and radiologist remain at table-side during the
procedure to operate the angiography system and work with the
catheters, contrast injectors and related devices. Typically
the patient simply needs to relax and stay calm during
angiography. Some angiography procedures can take up to two
hours while other procedures take less than an hour.
|
Angiogram of carotid artery and arteries of the
brain
|
|
-
Once the
procedure is finished, the patient will be given a period of
time to recover. During this period, the patient's case is
reviewed on film or monitor.
-
Depending on
the type of angiographic procedure and the patient's medical
condition, an inpatient recovery may be required or the patient
may be released after a short time. In some cases, more images
may need to be taken. For more information see what happens during a diagnostic imaging
examination?
Therapeutic (Interventional) Angiographic
Procedures
|
|
Conventional angiogram of descending aorta, kidneys
and renal arteries, note the narrowed renal artery seen on
the left (arrow)
|
Using angiography
to see inside the body, doctors can repair blood vessels without
the use of a scalpel and fully invasive surgical methods.
Advances in the design and use of catheters (small tubes that are
guided into the blood vessels through tiny incisions in the groin
area or upper arm) allow physicians to perform very complex
therapeutic procedures from within the blood vessel. Pathology of
the blood vessels such as plaque build up in the arms and legs,
neck and brain, and heart can be treated using a variety of
interventional angiographic surgery (e.g. coronary
angioplasty).
Replacing
Coronary Bypass with Coronary Angioplasty
Coronary bypass
surgery is a common, but invasive surgical procedure in the U.S.
and is performed over 200,000 times per year at an average cost
of about $25,000. During bypass surgery, synthetic blood vessels
or vessels grafted from other parts of the body are used to
create an alternative passage. This new vessel or "bypass"
functions in place of the clogged blood vessel to feed the
heart's tissue with blood, nutrients and oxygen. However, a new
technique called coronary artery angioplasty can be performed
without invasive surgery. In this method, angiography is used to
guide surgical stents (small cylindrical supports) into place in
order to re-open clogged blood vessels.
How Does Angiography Work?
Angiographic
x-ray imaging has grown into its own classification of x-ray
imaging over time. The basic principal is the same as a
conventional x-ray: x-rays are generated
by an x-ray tube and as they pass through the body part being
imaged, they are attenuated (weakened) at different levels. These
differences in x-ray attenuation are then measured by an Image
Intensifier and the resulting image is picked up by a TV camera.
In modern angiography systems, each frame of the analog TV signal
is then con verted to a digital frame and stored by a computer in
memory and/or on hard magnetic disk. These x-ray "movies" can be
viewed in real time as the angiography is being performed, or
they can be reviewed later using recall from digital
memory.
During
angiography, physicians inject streams of contrast agents or dyes
into the area of interest using catheters to create detailed
images of the blood vessels in real time. During the angiographic
procedure, physicians can guide a catheter into the area of
interest to remove stenoses (blockages) of blood vessels.
Patients with blockages of the major leg vessels, for instance,
can have nearly total recovery after angioplasty is performed to
remove the constriction.
Updated:
December 30, 2008
Return to Medical Procedures
Main Menu
|