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Encyclopedia > Arteriography

Angiography or arteriography is a medical imaging technique in which an X-ray picture is taken to visualize the inner opening of blood filled structures, including arteries, veins and the heart chambers. Its name comes from the Greek words angeion, "vessel", and graphien, "to write or record". The X-ray film or image of the blood vessels is called an angiograph, or more commonly, an angiogram.


Angiograms require the insertion of a catheter into a peripheral artery, e.g. the femoral artery.


As blood has the same radiodensity as the surrounding tissues, a radiocontrast agent (which absorbs X-rays) is added to the blood to make angiography visualization possible. The angiographic X-Ray image is actually a shadow picture of the openings within the cardiovascular structures carrying blood (actually the radiocontrast agent within). The blood vessels or heart chambers themselves remain largely to totally invisible on the X-Ray image.


The X-ray images may be taken as either still images, displayed on a fluoroscope or film, useful for mapping an area. Alternatively, they may be motion images, usually taken at 30 frames per second, which also show the speed of blood (actually the speed of radiocontrast within the blood) traveling within the blood vessel.


The most common angiogram performed is to visualize the blood in the coronary arteries. A long, thin, flexible tube called a catheter is used so as to administer the radiocontrast agent at the desired area to be visualized. The catheter is threaded into an artery in the groin or forearm, and the tip is advanced through the arterial system into one of the two major coronary arteries. X-ray images of the transient radiocontrast distribution within the blood flowing within the coronary arteries allows visualization of the size of the artery openings. Presence or absence of atherosclerosis or atheroma within the walls of the arteries cannot be clearly determined. See coronary catheterization for more detail.


Angiography is also commonly performed to identify vessel narrowing in patients with retinal vascular disorders, such as diabetic retinopathy and macular degeneration.


Types of angiographs

  • Cerebral angiography
  • Coronary angiography
  • Extremity angiography (arm or leg)
  • Renal angiography (kidneys)
  • Pulmonary angiography (lungs)
  • Lymphangiography (lymph vessels)
  • Right heart ventriculography (looking at the right side of the heart)
  • Left heart ventriculography (looking at the left side of the heart)
  • Aortography (looking at the aorta, the major artery from the heart)
  • Retinal angiography





  Results from FactBites:
 
Jornal Vascular Brasileiro (3837 words)
Arteriography is the complementary diagnostic exam that is still considered to be the gold standard.
The objective of the present study is to evaluate the need for preoperative arteriography of the aortoiliac segment in patients undergoing infrainguinal arterial reconstruction once their previous physical examination evidenced palpable femoral pulse in the affected extremity and their Doppler ultrasonography ruled out any hemodynamically significant lesion in the segment.
Since the images registered by the arteriography are two-dimensional, and atherosclerotic lesions commonly located in the posterior wall of the vessels are three-dimensional, the arteriographic examination usually underestimates the level of stenosis caused by the atherosclerotic plaque.
ARTERIOGRAPHY (208 words)
Arteriography, often called coronary angiography, is a testing procedure in which dye visible by X-ray is injected into the bloodstream.
Coronary arteriography is used to evaluate blockages in the arteries that supply blood to the heart.
Cerebral arteriography is used to show the extent and location of arteriosclerosis in the brain's major arteries.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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