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    Cardiac Procedures

    These procedures are used to evaluate and treat heart and blood vessel disease. Examples include cardiovascular disease and coronary artery disease. Talk with your doctor or heart care provider for more specific information.

    Procedures for abnormal heart rhythms

    • Catheter ablation. This procedure uses heat (radiofrequency), extreme cold (cryoablation) or short, or high-voltage electrical pulses (pulsed field ablation) to get rid of problem areas in the heart that cause abnormal heart rhythm. The problem area is found during an electrophysiology study. This study maps the electrical activity that controls the heart rhythm. The procedure can diagnose and possibly cure abnormal heart rhythms.
    • Permanent pacemaker. A permanent pacemaker is inserted into the upper chest and connected to the heart using wires. It provides a reliable heartbeat when the heart's own rhythm is too slow.
    • Implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). A defibrillator wire is inserted into the heart and connected to an implanted device in the chest. It can send out electricity to either pace or shock the heart back into normal rhythm. This can be lifesaving when life-threatening rhythms are found.

    Procedures for heart disease

    • Cardiac catheterization. A thin tube (catheter) is placed into the heart through a blood vessel in the leg or arm. The pressures of the heart are measured. A contrast agent can also be injected into the heart arteries or heart chambers while X-ray images are taken. This can identify structural problems of the heart as well as narrowing in the heart arteries.
    • Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). This includes several types of procedures that help improve blood flow through the coronary arteries.
      • Balloon angioplasty. This is also called PTCA (percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty). A small balloon is inflated inside a narrowed or blocked artery to re-establish blood flow. It's often done together with placement of a tiny mesh coil (stent).
      • Coronary artery stent. A tiny wire mesh coil is expanded inside the narrowed or blocked artery to open the blocked area. It's left in place to keep the artery open.
      • Atherectomy. A narrowed or blocked area inside an artery is shaved away by a tiny device on the end of a catheter.
      • Laser angioplasty. A laser is used to help open a blocked artery.
    • Coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). This is often called bypass surgery. It's often done in people who have chest pain (angina) and plaque buildup in the arteries (coronary artery disease) that can't be treated with PCI. During the surgery, the blocked artery is bypassed. This is done using a piece of another healthy blood vessel from another part of the body. The healthy blood vessel is attached above and below the blocked area of a coronary artery. This lets blood flow around the blockage. Veins are often taken from the leg. Arteries from the chest or arm may also be used to create a bypass graft. Sometimes several bypasses/grafts may be needed to restore blood flow to all areas of the heart.
    • Minimally invasive CABG. This is another way to do bypass surgery. The surgical tools and tiny cameras are passed through small holes in the chest wall. The surgeon views the operation on video monitors.
    • Intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP). This device helps your heart pump blood. It's a thin, flexible tube (catheter) with a long balloon at its tip (intra-aortic balloon). At the other end, the catheter attaches to a computer. The balloon is inflated and deflated. An IABP lets blood flow more easily into your coronary arteries. It helps give oxygen to the heart muscle. It also lets your heart pump more blood with each contraction.
    • Ventricular assist device (VAD). A VAD is a mechanical device that helps one or both of the heart's pumping chambers (ventricles) to pump blood. It may be needed when medicines and other treatments no longer work. A VAD can help the heart work while the patient is waiting for a heart transplant or when they are waiting to see if they are a candidate for a transplant. A VAD can also be a permanent treatment. And it can help the heart recover after surgery.
    • Heart transplant. This surgery is for certain people whose hearts are so badly damaged that medicines, procedures, and surgical repair can't help. A donated heart is transplanted into the person to replace the damaged heart.

    Procedures for valve disease

    • Valvuloplasty. A balloon-tipped catheter is used to open a narrowed heart valve. The catheter is guided from an artery in a leg or arm, through the aorta, to the aortic valve, or to the mitral valve. Once in place within the valve, the balloon is inflated and the valve is opened. The balloon is then deflated and removed from the body.
    • Valve repair. This is surgery to fix a damaged valve by loosening stiff valve leaflets or tightening loose valve leaflets.
    • Valve replacement. A mechanical or tissue valve is transplanted into the heart to replace the damaged valve. Often this is done during open heart surgery. For some people with aortic valve stenosis (narrowing), a new valve may be placed within the old valve and opened up to ease the stenosis. This is called TAVR (transcatheter aortic valve replacement). It does not require open heart surgery.
    Online Medical Reviewer: Stacey Wojcik MBA BSN RN
    Online Medical Reviewer: Steven Kang MD
    Date Last Reviewed: 9/1/2025
    © 2000-2026 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.
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    Southern New Mexico
    Surgery Center

    2301 Indian Wells Rd. Suite B
    Alamogordo, NM 88310
    www.snmsc.org

    Phone: 575.437.0890
    Fax: 575.437.0905
    Email: info@snmsc.org

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