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angioplastie

Angioplastie, or percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA), is a minimally invasive endovascular procedure designed to restore blood flow through a narrowed or blocked artery. A balloon-tipped catheter is guided through the vascular system to the site of the narrowing, where the balloon is inflated to widen the lumen. In many cases a stent—a small mesh tube—may be deployed to keep the artery open. Advances include drug-eluting stents and directional atherectomy; but balloon angioplasty alone remains common for certain lesions.

Indications include coronary artery disease causing angina or infarction risk, peripheral artery disease especially in the

Risks include bleeding, vessel injury, contrast-induced nephropathy, infection, restenosis or stent thrombosis, and, rarely, stroke or

Angioplasty has evolved since its development in the late 20th century, and remains an alternative to bypass

legs,
and
access
to
treat
renal
or
carotid
arterial
stenosis.
It
is
often
performed
after
imaging
tests
reveal
narrowed
arteries.
The
procedure
is
usually
done
under
local
anesthesia
with
conscious
sedation
and
uses
imaging
guidance;
access
is
commonly
gained
via
the
femoral
or
radial
artery.
heart
attack.
Overall
risk
is
low
in
experienced
centers.
Recovery
ranges
from
same-day
discharge
to
short
hospital
stay;
patients
typically
resume
light
activity
within
days
and
take
antiplatelet
therapy
for
weeks
to
months.
surgery
for
many
patients,
depending
on
anatomy
and
overall
risk
profile.