Coronary Revascularization: Procedure Details & Risks
What happens before this procedure?
Before you undergo any coronary revascularization procedure, you’ll likely take several medical tests that will help providers plan the best ways to treat your condition. These tests can include, but aren’t limited to, one or more of the following:
If you’re having a coronary revascularization procedure in a nonemergency situation, your provider will also have you fast before it starts. That usually involves stopping all foods except clear liquids at least eight hours before the procedure and stopping all liquids at least two hours before.
Right before the procedure begins, a healthcare provider will also place an intravenous (IV) line into one of your veins (usually on one of your arms). IV lines let providers give you fluids and medications quickly and easily. You’ll likely receive a sedative medication to help you relax for PCI. You’ll receive general anesthesia for CABG, which puts you into a deep sleep through the procedure.
What happens during this procedure?
PCI and CABG try to achieve the same goal but use very different approaches.
PCI
Percutaneous coronary intervention involves a catheter (hollow, tube-like device) that a healthcare provider inserts into a major blood vessel somewhere on your body (usually in your wrist or upper thigh). Once the catheter’s inside, the provider steers the catheter to your heart and uses various tools and methods to restore blood flow. They may also inject a special liquid that’s visible on X-ray imaging to help them see a blockage and how to approach it.
Depending on your situation and needs, a provider may use one or both of the following tools and techniques:
- Balloon angioplasty. This technique involves a balloon attachment on the leading tip of the catheter. Once the provider steers the catheter to the blocked or narrowed area of the artery, they inflate the balloon to widen it.
- Stenting. This technique involves placing a stent, a framework support structure that keeps a narrowed area of the artery open. Stents can be bare metal, or the framework may have a medication coating. The coating slowly releases a medication to prevent new stenosis (narrowing) in the immediate area around the stent.
- Brachytherapy. This involves applying radiation from inside the blood vessels to prevent more stenosis after medical procedures like stenting. While brachytherapy is mainly a cancer treatment, it’s also a useful procedure to prevent stenosis (narrowing) of blood vessels from returning.
After widening the artery (and placing a stent, if that happens), the provider will withdraw and remove the catheter and stitch the access site closed to finish the procedure.
CABG
To do this, the surgeon will first locate and “harvest” a blood vessel from somewhere in your body. That vessel can come from a leg, arm or your back. They then access your heart in one of two ways:
- Open surgery: Open surgery uses an incision in your chest to access your heart. This incision is several inches long down the center of your chest, allowing a surgeon to crack your sternum (breastbone) and then lift and separate your rib cage. That gives them easy access to your heart.
- Minimally-invasive and/or robot-assisted surgery: This method involves one or more small incisions, letting a surgeon reach your heart with specialized surgical tools that use the spaces between your ribs to get to your heart. With robotic surgery, this same approach happens but with robotic arms “driven” by the surgeon, along with a small robot arm-mounted camera that lets them see what to do.
Providers may temporarily stop your heart and use a heart-lung bypass machine, depending on the method. That device adds oxygen to and takes carbon dioxide out of your blood, and keeps your blood circulating. However, some people may have off-pump bypass surgery, during which their heart beats continuously.
Once the surgeon reaches your heart, the surgeon uses the harvested blood vessel to craft a bypass vessel around a blocked section of the artery. The bypass restores or maintains blood flow to areas of your heart with limited or no blood flow.
Once the bypass is in place, they can stitch your chest closed and restart your heart (if they stopped it). If they use the open method, they’ll put your ribs back into place and wire your sternum together so it can heal before closing the incision. If they use minimally-invasive or robot-assisted methods, they’ll withdraw the tools through the smaller incisions and stitch those closed.
Specialized approaches
Multiple techniques can happen along with those listed above to increase your chances of a successful revascularization procedure, or they can happen on their own. These include:
- Total arterial revascularization: This means that the blood vessel harvested to create a bypass vessel is also an artery rather than a vein. Arteries tend to hold up better when used to create a bypass vessel and are less likely to have some of the common complications with vein-based bypass grafts.
- Transmyocardial revascularization: Transmyocardial means, “through the heart muscle.” Often known as transmyocardial laser revascularization or TMR, this procedure involves firing a specific type of laser into the heart muscle. The laser’s effects on the muscle help improve blood flow to those areas of the heart muscle and stimulate the formation of new blood vessels that can supply those areas. TMR can help when other procedures aren’t an option or haven’t worked, but it also has limitations on when it’s useful. It’s also sometimes used along with CABG to improve CABG’s chance of success.
What happens after this procedure?
After this procedure, you’ll need some time to recover. The recovery time depends on the procedure itself, your overall condition and whether you need the procedure for an emergency reason. In general, the better your overall health is, the shorter your hospital stay and the easier you’ll recover.
As you recover, your healthcare provider may recommend that you participate in a cardiac rehabilitation program. These programs have expert staff from multiple backgrounds, including doctors, nurses, exercise physiologists, nutritionists and dietitians, and more.
These professionals will help you learn how to exercise and care for yourself and your heart’s needs. That ensures that your condition improves and that you have the strength, ability and understanding to resume your usual daily routine as you recover from coronary revascularization.
Your provider will also schedule follow-up visits and testing to ensure your heart is functioning as it should. It’s important to keep up with those visits and follow your provider’s guidance regarding what you eat, physical activity, medications to take and more. It’s also important to understand what your provider’s telling you and why, so asking questions about anything you don’t understand can make a big difference in your well-being.
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