Summary

Coronary artery disease can cause pain, shortness of breath and heart attacks. A PCI is usually a safe and effective way to relieve your pain, and may help you to live longer.

What is a PCI?

A PCI is used to treat the symptoms of coronary artery disease, which is narrowing of the coronary arteries (blood vessels that supply your heart muscle with oxygen).

A PCI is a procedure to widen or unblock an artery using a small inflatable balloon.

What are the benefits of a PCI?

Having a PCI to widen or unblock an artery should improve the flow of blood without you having to have open heart surgery.

You should get less pain. A PCI may also improve your breathing if blocked or narrowed arteries are causing you to be short of breath. Sometimes a PCI can be used to treat an artery during or soon after a heart attack or to reduce the risk of you having another heart attack.

Are there any alternatives to a PCI?

For some people it may be possible to have a coronary bypass operation.

Coronary artery disease can be treated using medication to relieve the symptoms and to help prevent the disease from getting worse.
Percutaneous coronary intervention

What does the procedure involve?

A PCI usually takes between 30 minutes to two hours.

If appropriate, your cardiologist may offer you a sedative or painkiller.

A sheath (short, soft plastic tube used to access your artery) is usually inserted in your femoral artery near your groin or radial artery near your wrist. Your cardiologist will pass a catheter along the artery to your heart.

They will pass a small tube, with a small inflatable balloon at the end, down the catheter and across the narrowed part of the artery. They will inflate the balloon to widen the artery. In most cases they will also expand a stent inside the artery to hold it open (see figure 1).

What complications can happen?

1 Complications during or soon after the procedure

  • Bleeding after the procedure
  • Bruising
  • Haematoma
  • Infection
  • Infection of the stent
  • False aneurysm or arteriovenous fistula
  • Kidney damage
  • Allergic reaction
  • Radiation exposure
  • Blood clot
  • Lost stent
  • Change in heart rhythm
  • Blood leaking into the sac that surrounds your heart
  • Heart attack
  • Stroke
  • Radial artery spasm

2 Late complications

  • Stent restenosis
  • Stent thrombosis

How soon will I recover?

You should be able to go home the same day or the day after.

It is important that you do not do any strenuous activity for about a week.

If you have high blood pressure or high cholesterol, you will usually need to continue with most of the medication you were on before the procedure.

Acknowledgements

Author: Dr Julia Baron MD FRCP BMBS
Illustrations: LifeART image copyright 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.-Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. All rights reserved

Percutaneous coronary intervention - download PDF version

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Last updated: June 2015

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