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Encyclopedia > Balloon catheter
Catheter disassembled

In medicine, a catheter is a tube that a health professional may insert into part of the body. The process of inserting a catheter is catheterization. In most uses it is a thin, flexible tube: a "soft" catheter; in some, it is a larger, solid tube: a "hard" catheter.


Placement of a catheter into a particular part of the body may allow:

A central line is a conduit for giving drugs or fluids into a large-bore catheter positioned either in a vein near the heart or just inside the atrium.


See also:



  Results from FactBites:
 
Datascope - Cardiac Assist Products - Balloon Catheters (129 words)
Smaller is better for the patient, potentially reducing vascular complications.
This Reduced size enables clinicians to deliver counterpulsation therapy to a broader range of patient, including those with smaller peripheral vasculature.
A giant step forward in IAB catheter technology.
Balloon catheter - Patent 5352199 (1869 words)
The catheter includes a transaxially expandable dilation element consisting essentially of a distensible membrane attached thereto in fluid communication with a lumen for inflation, the element defining a chamber that is expanded by fluid transferred therein via the lumen.
The balloon is formed into the desired shape by blow-molding, or otherwise, and it is attached to a catheter in fluid communication with a lumen thereof.
To use the device, the catheter 110 with the balloon 114 deflated is inserted by known techniques and positioned in a valve orifice, between valve leaflets 112, 112.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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