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| • The Cardiac Catheter Laboratory is quite simply just an X-ray room with a very high resolution X-ray camera that can take a movie picture of your heart. I will perform the test and a radiographer will take the X-ray. |
| • You will be asked to lie on the table which can be moved. The X-ray machine is mounted above the table. |
| • It is understandable that you may be anxious and if you wish I can give you an injection of some Valium to make you feel calm during the test. |
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| • We will paint antiseptic on your groin when you are lying flat on the table and then cover you with a sterile drape. You will be able to chat to me throughout the procedure if you wish although there will be certain times when I will ask you to hold your breath and not to talk. |
• I will inject some local anaesthetic in the skin at the top of your leg. This sometimes stings a little bit like having a blood sample but it is rarely any worse. You will then feel me put pressure on the skin and I will insert a very fine tube into a blood vessel at the top of your groin. Most people do not feel anything apart from the pressure of my fingers at this stage.
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| • We will inject dye (it looks like water) into the coronary arteries and the chamber of the heart (the left ventricle).
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| • We will record an X-ray as the dye passes through the arteries. |
| • When the catheter is removed at the end of the procedure there may be little bleeding from the needle puncture site. To control this we will apply pressure to the site. We frequently use a little plug to close the tiny hole left after removing the catheter. This avoids the need for prolonged pressure to the site. |
| • If we use
a “plug” you will probably be able to get
up and go home after a couple of hours. If for technical
reasons a plug cannot be used you will need to stay in
the hospital 5 to 6 hours before going home. When you
get home we want you to rest and not to exercise until
the following day. |
| • The cardiac
catheterisation is not painful but sometimes you may feel
a very slight discomfort like your anginal pain. Do not
worry, this does not mean anything is wrong but just let
me know. |
| • It usually
takes me 5 to 7 minutes to carry out the procedure and
I will normally tell you the results immediately after
I have looked at the pictures at the end of the investigation. |
| • Your cardiac catheter will be carried out either at the Wellington Hospital or rarely at the Royal Free Hospital. |
| • Sometimes
the angiogram suggests that we should unblock an artery
with a balloon and implant a stent. This can often be
carried out at the time you have the angiogram. If this
is carried out you will need to stay in hospital overnight
and go home the following morning. |
| • A letter will be sent to your GP. |
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