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ATHERECTOMY
Definition
Atherectomy is a non-surgical procedure to open blocked coronary
arteries or vein grafts by using a device on the end of a catheter to cut or
shave away atherosclerotic plaque (a deposit of fat and other substances that
accumulate in the lining of the artery wall).
Purpose
Atherectomy is performed to restore the flow of oxygen-rich blood to
the heart, to relieve chest pain, and to prevent heart attacks. It may be
done on patients with chest pain who have not responded to other medical therapy
and on certain of those who are candidates for balloon angioplasty (a
surgical procedure in which a balloon catheter is used to flatten plaque against
an artery wall) or coronary artery bypass graft surgery. It is sometimes
performed to remove plaque that has built up after a coronary artery bypass
graft surgery.
Precautions
Atherectomy should not be performed when the plaque is located where
blood vessels divide into branches, when plaque is angular or inside an angle of
a blood vessel, on patients with weak vessel walls, on ulcerated or
calcium-hardened lesions, or on blockages through which a guide wire won't
pass.
Description
Atherectomy uses a rotating shaver or other device placed on the end
of a catheter to slice away or destroy plaque. At the beginning of the
procedure, medications to control blood pressure, dilate the coronary arteries,
and prevent blood clots are administered. The patient is awake but sedated. The
catheter is inserted into an artery in the groin, leg, or arm, and threaded
through the blood vessels into the blocked coronary artery. The cutting head is
positioned against the plaque and activated, and the plaque is ground up or
suctioned out.
The types of atherectomy are rotational, directional, and
transluminal extraction. Rotational atherectomy uses a high speed rotating
shaver to grind up plaque. Directional atherectomy was the first type approved,
but is no longer commonly used; it scrapes plaque into an opening in one side of
the catheter. Transluminal extraction coronary atherectomy uses a device that
cuts plaque off vessel walls and vacuums it into a bottle. It is used to clear
bypass grafts.
Performed in a cardiac catheterization lab, atherectomy is
also called removal of plaque from the coronary arteries. It can be used instead
of, or along with, balloon angioplasty. Atherectomy is successful about 95% of
the time. Plaque forms again in 20-30% of patients.
Preparation
The day before atherectomy, the patient takes medication to prevent
blood clots and may be asked to bathe and shampoo with an antiseptic skin
cleaner.
Aftercare
After the procedure, the patient spends several days in the
hospital's cardiac monitoring area. For at least 20 minutes, pressure is applied
to a dressing on the insertion site. For the first hour, an electrocardiogram
and close monitoring are conducted; vital signs are checked every 15 minutes.
Pain medication is then administered. The puncture site is checked once an hour
or more. For most of the first 24 hours, the patient remains in
bed.
Risks
Chest pain is the most common complication of atherectomy. Other
common complications are injury to the blood vessel lining, plaque that
re-forms, blood clots (hematoma), and bleeding at the site of insertion. More
serious but less frequent complications are blood vessel holes, blood vessel
wall tears, or reduced blood flow to the heart.
Atherosclerotic plaque
A deposit of fat and other substances
that accumulate in the lining of the artery wall.
Balloon angioplasty
A surgical procedure in which a balloon
catheter is used to flatten plaque against an artery wall.
Coronary arteries
The two main arteries that provide
blood to the heart. The coronary arteries surround the heart like a crown,
coming out of the aorta, arching down over the top of the heart, and dividing
into two branches. These are the arteries where coronary artery disease occurs.
Hematoma
A localized collection of blood,
usually clotted, due to a break in the wall of blood
vessel.
For Your
Information: Please consult your
physician on your next
visit.
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