
Coronary Angioplasty |  | 
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Angioplasty relieves symptoms of coronary artery disease by improving blood flow to your heart. If it's determined your condition might benefit from a coronary angioplasty, your doctor will talk to you and explain how angioplasty can help.
During the procedure
- A guide wire is inserted through the guiding catheter (a thin, flexible tube) and moved to the narrow spot in your artery. Your doctor tracks its movement on an angiogram, a special kind of X-ray
- A balloon-tipped catheter is inserted through the guiding catheter and threaded over the guide wire. It is positioned at the narrow part of the artery
- The balloon is inflated and deflated several times to compress the plaque against the artery wall. You may feel angina (chest pain) when the balloon is inflated. Tell your doctor if you do
- The balloon is deflated and the catheters and guide wire are removed. The artery is now open, and blood flow to the heart muscle increases
After the procedure
When to call your doctor Call your doctor if:
- You have angina (chest pain)
- The insertion site has pain, swelling, redness, bleeding or drainage
- You have severe pain, coldness or a bluish color in the leg or arm that held the catheter
- You experience blood in your urine, black or tarry stools or any other kind of bleeding
- You have a fever over 101°F
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Watch this short video to learn more about Mercy-affiliated Interventional Cardiologist Michael Chang, MD, Medical Director of Cardiovascular Services, and hear directly from him about what makes Mercy one of the leading cardiology and cardiac surgery programs in the country.
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