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Angiography

Introduction

Angiography is a technique used to visualise the inside of of blood vessels, whereby radio-opaque die is injected into the patient, and imaging studies are subsequently performed.

These can be x-rays or CT scans (“CT angio”).

Angiography can be performed on many different structures. Common examples include coronary angiography (when assessing for coronary artery disease and MI), CTPA (looking for pulmonary embolus), cerebral angiography (when looking for stroke), abdominal angiography (looking for ischaemic bowel), and of the limbs (when assessing for peripheral vascular disease and acute limb ischaemia).

To get an idea of the basic principles go angiography, in this article we discuss coronary angiography, unless otherwise stated.

Coronary angiography is used to assess the extent of angina and ischaemic heart disease. It involves cardiac catheterisation. Once the catheter is in place, an iodine based dye is injected into the coronary vessels, and the extent of narrowing (atheroma) can be asses by –x-ray.
A coronary angiogram showing good blood flow int he left circumflex artery after a stunting procedure. This file is taken from wikimedia commons and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Procedure

Complications

References

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