A specially trained cardiologist performs the procedure.
Some catheterizations are performed on an outpatient basis (the patient arrives in the morning for the procedure, and may be able to go home in the afternoon or evening). Your cardiologist will tell you whether an outpatient procedure is appropriate for you, and give details on how to prepare for a heart cath.
Your child is given a sedative to help her relax and sleep during the procedure.
In the "cath lab,” your child will lie on a small table with a c-shaped X-ray machine. Heart monitors and other equipment are nearby. A specially trained staff of nurses, technicians, and physicians monitor your child and make sure she is comfortable during the procedure.
- Step 1: Your child receives an injection of local anesthetic in the spot where the catheter will be inserted. Next, a thin, flexible tube (catheter) is inserted into a blood vessel, most often in the groin area.
- Step 2: The cardiologist uses X-rays, called fluoroscopy, to help visualize the movement of the catheter as it makes its way up the vein toward the right atrium. Eventually, the tube is guided into the right ventricle, the pulmonary artery, and perhaps the right and/or left pulmonary artery branches.
- Step 3: While inside the heart, several things are done to help evaluate the heart structures, as well as the pattern of blood flow:
- Blood samples are drawn from a number of vessels and heart chambers, which will allow for calculation of heart function and flow characteristics.
- Blood pressure measurements are taken.
- A contrast fluid is injected into the catheter and, as it flows inside the heart, X-ray films are made of the path the fluid takes throughout the heart.