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Coronary Artery Angioplasty (PCI, Heart Stent Surgery)
Coronary Artery Angioplasty (PCI, Heart Stent Surgery)
If you like this animation, LIKE us on Facebook: www.nucleusinc.com Visit www.healthanimations.com for FREE videos, illustrations and patient handouts for healthcare providers. This 3D heart animation shows a coronary artery angioplasty surgery, also called a percutaneous coronary intervention, or PCI, to correct a blocked artery in the heart. It begins by showing the buildup of plaque in an artery wall of the heart, blocking the flow of blood. Afterwards, the patient lies on a testing table while contrast dye is injected into the arteries of the heart, showing the location of the blockage. A guide wire is then moved through the lumen of the blood vessel, followed by a balloon and stent mechanism. The balloon inflates, putting the metal stent in place, so that the lumen of the artery is open and the red blood cells can flow freely. ANCE00178 For information on Atherosclerosis, visit www.nucleusinc.com
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What is ANGIOPLASTY and STENTING?
What is ANGIOPLASTY and STENTING?
Beautiful animated explanation courtsey MAYO CLINIC posted for public awareness and education by Dr Siddharth Dagli
10:30
Angioplasty
Angioplasty
Watch and learn as a doctor takes you step by step through a cutting edge angioplasty.
3:15
Angioplasty: What is It ?
Angioplasty: What is It ?
In this video we describe angioplasty, the interventional cardiac procedure to clear blocked arteries. The New York State Department of Health has recognized North Shore University Hospital (NSUH) for successful outcomes in emergency angioplasty.
11:28
Femoral Angiogram/Angioplasty with OEC Hybrid OR
Femoral Angiogram/Angioplasty with OEC Hybrid OR
Femoral Angiogram/Angioplasty performed with OEC Hybrid OR. Dr. Coatti has consulted for GE Healthcare in the past.
0:25
ANGIOPLASTY STENT
ANGIOPLASTY STENT
Coronary angioplasty stent. This 3D video is available for purchase at : mleconte@noos.fr
1:13
Angioplasty
Angioplasty
Angioplasty is usually performed on the arteries which supply the heart. A small tube, or catheter, with a deflated balloon on its tip is passed into a narrowed artery segment. The balloon is then inflated at the narrow segment in order to widen the area and increase blood flow.
3:08
Malpractice Medical Stent Implantation Coronary Angioplasty Surgery 3
Malpractice Medical Stent Implantation Coronary Angioplasty Surgery 3
www.PreOp.com Medical Malpractice and Patient Education Company Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO Then the doctor will make a small cut over the femoral artery in the upper part of the leg. A special needle is then inserted into the artery itself. Then a guide wire is carefully passed through the needle and gently pushed into the artery and upwards towards your chest. A narrow tube, called a catheter is threaded along the wire until it too has reached the coronary artery Next, the doctor uses the catheter to inject a dye into the artery itself. The die shows up on a TV monitor and is used to pinpoint the exact location of the blocked area. Once the restricted area has been identified, a thin wire is inserted into the catheter, and is guided all the way to the blocked area and then slightly beyond. This wire acts as guide for the balloon catheter. It allows your doctor to position the deflated balloon precisely in the middle of the narrowest part of the coronary artery. The balloon is briefly inflated. As it expands, it squeezes the plaque deposits against the wall of the artery. It also stretches the artery wall and enlarges the channel through which blood flows. Your doctor will continue to inflate and deflate the balloon until normal blood flow has been restored. The balloon catheter is then withdrawn and another balloon catheter is inserted. This balloon has the mesh stent tube wrapped around it. Once this tube has been placed in the center of now widened area of the <b>...</b>
1:23
PreOp® Patient Education Heart Stent Implant Angioplasty
PreOp® Patient Education Heart Stent Implant Angioplasty
www.PreOp.com Patient ED @ 617-379-1582 INFO Your doctor has recommended that you undergo a balloon angioplasty with a stent implant. But what does that actually mean? The heart is located in the center of the chest. It's job is to keep blood continually circulating throughout the body. The blood vessels that supply the body with oxygen-rich blood are called arteries. The arteries that supplies blood to the heart muscle itself are called coronary arteries. Sometimes, these blood vessels can narrow or become blocked by plaque deposits, restricting normal blood flow. In simple terms, a balloon angioplasty with stent insertion is a procedure used to increase the amount of blood flowing through the coronary artery. During a balloon angioplasty, a heart specialist will insert a thin tube into an artery in your arm or leg and gently guide it towards the problem area in your heart. Once the tube is in place, a small balloon is briefly inflated in order to widen the narrowed artery. A short length of mesh tubing called a stent is then inserted into the newly widened artery. During and after the procedure, your doctor will take x-rays in order to monitor your progress.
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Coronary Angioplasty - procedure to relieve a blocked artery
Coronary Angioplasty - procedure to relieve a blocked artery
OR-Live.com webcast December 18, 2007 at 6:30 PM CST From St. Mary's Medical Center Duluth, MN St. Mary's Duluth Clinic Heart Center in Duluth, MN, plans to broadcast a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), also called a coronary angioplasty, live on the Internet. The webcast is slated for Tuesday, December 18, 2007, at 6:30 pm The public will be able to watch doctors use a minimally invasive procedure to relieve a blocked artery in the heart. A member of the interventional cardiology team at the Heart Center will perform the live procedure. At the same time, two of their colleagues, interventional cardiologists Michael Lucca, MD, and Kathleen Braddy, MD, FACC, will help to explain the surgery and answer questions as they are e-mailed by viewers.
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PreOp® Patient Education Balloon Angioplasty Coronary Angioplasty
PreOp® Patient Education Balloon Angioplasty Coronary Angioplasty
www.PreOp.com Patient Education Company Your doctor has recommended that you undergo a balloon angioplasty. But what does that actually mean? The heart is located in the center of the chest. It's job is to keep blood continually circulating throughout the body. The blood vessels that supply the body with oxygen-rich blood are called arteries. The arteries that supplies blood to the heart muscle itself are called coronary arteries. Sometimes, these blood vessels can narrow or become blocked by plaque deposits, restricting normal blood flow. In simple terms, a balloon angioplasty is a procedure used to increase the amount of blood flowing through the coronary artery. During a balloon angioplasty, a heart specialist will insert a thin tube into an artery in your arm or leg and gently guide it towards the problem area in your heart. Once the tube is in place, a small balloon is briefly inflated in order to widen the narrowed artery. During and after the procedure, your doctor will take x-rays in order to monitor your progress. Patient Education Company
2:52
Scott Weslow, MD, angioplasty HealthWatch segment February 2012
Scott Weslow, MD, angioplasty HealthWatch segment February 2012
This segment features BayCare Clinic Cardiologist Dr. Scott Weslow, explaining how Dr. Weslow performed an angioplasty and stent placement on a patient that had 100% blockage from the knee down.
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Laser angioplasty
Laser angioplasty
Laser angioplasty is one of thevideo from the "Animated Medical & Health Dictionary"- a collection of morethan 650 animated video definitions published by Focus Medica Pte. Ltd. . For more information please visit www.focusmedica.com.
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Heart - Stent Implantation Coronary Angioplasty PreOp® Patient Education HD
Heart - Stent Implantation Coronary Angioplasty PreOp® Patient Education HD
on.fb.me - NEW facebook page - it's cool! Patient Education Company Your doctor has recommended that you undergo a balloon angioplasty with a stent implant. But what does that actually mean? The heart is located in the center of the chest. It's job is to keep blood continually circulating throughout the body. The blood vessels that supply the body with oxygen-rich blood are called arteries. The arteries that supplies blood to the heart muscle itself are called coronary arteries. Sometimes, these blood vessels can narrow or become blocked by plaque deposits, restricting normal blood flow. In simple terms, a balloon angioplasty with stent insertion is a procedure used to increase the amount of blood flowing through the coronary artery. During a balloon angioplasty, a heart specialist will insert a thin tube into an artery in your arm or leg and gently guide it towards the problem area in your heart. Once the tube is in place, a small balloon is briefly inflated in order to widen the narrowed artery. A short length of mesh tubing called a stent is then inserted into the newly widened artery. During and after the procedure, your doctor will take x-rays in order to monitor your progress. Patient Education Company Then the doctor will make a small cut over the femoral artery in the upper part of the leg. A special needle is then inserted into the artery itself. Then a guide wire is carefully passed through the needle and gently pushed into the artery and upwards towards your <b>...</b>
2:29
Blocked Coronary Artery with Balloon Angioplasty and Stent Repair
Blocked Coronary Artery with Balloon Angioplasty and Stent Repair
This 3D medical animation depicts a coronary artery blockage confirmed by angiogram test, followed by a balloon angioplasty and stent repair. The animation begins by zooming into a coronary artery on the heart, and showing the buildup of plaque. Afterward, a guidewire (guy wire) and catheter with contrast dye are inserted into a blood vessel in the groin, and threaded up to the coronary vessels. As the dye is released, the location of the coronary artery blockage is revealed. Next, a balloon and stent are used to open the blocked artery and resume normal blood flow. Item #ANIM017
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Angioplasty Stenting Atherectomy Thrombolysis
Angioplasty Stenting Atherectomy Thrombolysis
Angioplasty and Stenting performed by making a small incision into the skin above an artery in the arm or groin in order to access the artery. The physician then threads a balloon-tipped catheter from the incision site through the arterial system to the leg artery that is blocked or narrowed. Once the balloon is positioned under the plaque, the physician inflates it to break up and compress the plaque and widen the blood vessel, improving blood flow through the artery. In some cases, the physician may then insert a stent, a small metal-mesh tube, to prop open the artery following angioplasty. When angioplasty is successful, it has excellent results. Approximately 60 to 70 percent of patients who have an angioplasty have patent vessels, or vessels that remain open to provide adequate blood flow to the legs, 2 years after the procedure. The initial failure rate for angioplasty in patients with leg artery disease is only about 10 percent. Failure may occur if the catheter is unable to move through the blockage or a weakened artery collapses after angioplasty and is impossible to keep open. For more advanced forms of leg artery disease, procedures that are more invasive than angioplasty, usually a surgical bypass graft or endarterectomy, may be needed An atherectomy is a procedure that utilizes a catheter with a sharp blade on the end to remove plaque from a blood vessel. The catheter is inserted into the artery through a small puncture in the artery, and it is performed <b>...</b>
2:21
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention- Coronary Angioplasty
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention- Coronary Angioplasty
Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, commonly known as coronary or balloon angioplasty, is a procedure to widen blocked arteries and restore blood flow to the heart muscle. PCI is used in cases where plaque buildup inside the arteries, known as athersclerosis or "hardening of the arteries," causes a risk factor for heart attack. Coronary angiography, which uses a special dye visible on live X-Ray, is performed to locate the blocked artery. A balloon catheter expands the artery at the blockage, allowing blood to flow through the artery. A stent is often used to keep the artery open. A drug-eluting stent releases medication over time that will keep the blockage from reforming inside the stent. This animation was created for Kendall Campbell, MD, Associate Professor at the Florida State University College of Medicine. All content is copyright 2011 by the Florida State University College of Medicine
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Angioplasty Treatment
Angioplasty Treatment
In this video we describe angioplasty, the interventional cardiac procedure to clear blocked arteries...This is developed by Walk-on-Water Animation Studios located in Mumbai, India
3:15
NCPTA: Non Cardiac Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty
NCPTA: Non Cardiac Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty
If you like this animation, LIKE us on Facebook: www.nucleusinc.com www.nucleusinc.com A non-cardiac percutaneous transluminal angioplasty, or NCPTA, is done to restore blood flow in an artery blocked by atherosclerotic plaque. This 3D medical animation shows the steps involved in preforming a Non Cardiac Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty.