Coronary Angioplasty in Hyderabad | Germanten Hospital

Coronary Angioplasty in Hyderabad


Expert Coronary Angioplasty & Stenting Services

Cardiology Treatments

Coronary Angioplasty in Hyderabad

Coronary angioplasty, formally called percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), is the most commonly performed procedure for treating blocked or narrowed coronary arteries. It restores blood flow to the heart muscle without open-heart surgery, typically through a small puncture at the wrist or groin.

At Germanten Hospital, our senior interventional cardiologist Dr. Mohammed Wasif Azam has performed over 10,000 complex coronary procedures. Our fully equipped flat-panel digital Cath Lab is available 24 hours a day for both emergency and elective angioplasty. Most patients are discharged within 24 to 48 hours and return to normal activity within a week.

What is Coronary Angioplasty?

The coronary arteries are the blood vessels that supply oxygen-rich blood to the heart muscle. In coronary artery disease, fatty plaques build up inside these arteries over years, gradually narrowing them and reducing blood flow. When a significant blockage is identified on coronary angiography, angioplasty is used to open the artery and restore normal circulation.

The procedure involves guiding a thin, flexible catheter to the blocked artery under X-ray imaging. A small balloon at the tip of the catheter is inflated to compress the plaque and widen the artery. In virtually all cases today, a stent (a small metal mesh tube) is then placed at the site to hold the artery open long-term. Modern drug-eluting stents release medication that prevents scar tissue from forming inside the stent, significantly reducing the risk of the artery re-narrowing.

When is Coronary Angioplasty Recommended?

Heart Attack (STEMI)

Emergency angioplasty (primary PCI) is the definitive treatment for a complete coronary blockage causing a STEMI. Speed is critical. Our golden-hour protocol targets Cath Lab access within 60 minutes of hospital arrival.

Unstable Angina / NSTEMI

Significant blockages causing rest pain or enzyme-positive events are treated urgently with angioplasty within 24 to 72 hours of presentation.

Stable Angina

Patients with chest pain on exertion and significant blockages confirmed on angiography who do not respond adequately to medications are candidates for elective angioplasty.

Positive Stress Test

A stress test showing significant ischemia (reduced blood flow) during exercise, even without symptoms, may prompt angiography and angioplasty if a significant blockage is found.

Prior Bypass Graft Disease

Blockages in old bypass grafts can be treated with angioplasty and stenting in appropriate cases.

Angioplasty may not be the preferred option in all cases. Patients with complex three-vessel disease, left main artery disease, or diabetes often achieve better long-term outcomes with coronary bypass surgery (CABG). Our team will discuss both options with you based on your angiography findings.

The Angioplasty Procedure: Step by Step

Preparation:

Blood tests, ECG, and a review of medications are completed before the procedure. Antiplatelet medications (aspirin and clopidogrel) are started beforehand to prevent clot formation during and after the procedure.

Access:

A local anesthetic is applied to the wrist (radial approach, preferred) or groin (femoral approach). A small sheath is inserted into the artery through which all catheters pass.

Coronary Angiography:

A guide catheter is advanced to the opening of the coronary artery under X-ray guidance. Contrast dye is injected to visualize the arteries and identify the blockage precisely.

Wire Crossing:

A thin guidewire is carefully passed through the blockage, providing a track over which the balloon catheter travels.

Balloon Inflation:

The balloon is positioned at the blockage and inflated for 20 to 30 seconds, compressing the plaque against the artery wall and widening the channel.

Stent Deployment:

A drug-eluting stent mounted on the balloon is deployed at the site. When the balloon is inflated, the stent expands and locks into place, acting as a permanent scaffold to keep the artery open.

Final Check:

Contrast dye is injected again to confirm the artery is fully open and blood flow is restored. The catheters are removed and the wrist or groin access site is closed.

Recovery:

The patient is transferred to the cardiology ward or cardiac ICU for monitoring. Wrist-access patients typically sit up within a few hours. Most are discharged the following day.

The entire procedure typically takes 45 to 90 minutes for a single-vessel case. Complex multi-vessel procedures may take longer. You are awake throughout with sedation available if needed.

Radial vs Femoral Approach

At Germanten, we strongly prefer the transradial (wrist) approach for most angioplasty procedures. The evidence for radial access is compelling:

  • Bleeding complications
    Significantly lower with radial access (under 1%) compared to femoral access (1 to 3%)
  • Post-procedure mobility
    Radial patients sit up and walk within hours. Femoral patients require 4 to 6 hours of bed rest.
  • Patient comfort
    Most patients find the wrist bandage far more comfortable than a femoral compression device.
  • Discharge timing
    Radial access patients are often suitable for next-day discharge versus longer stays with femoral access.
  • Mortality in STEMI
    Multiple studies show lower 30-day mortality with radial access in primary PCI for heart attack.

Types of Stents Used at Germanten

Drug-Eluting Stents (DES)

The current gold standard. A metal stent coated with medication (typically everolimus or zotarolimus) that is slowly released to prevent scar tissue from forming inside the stent. Reduces restenosis rates to under 5%.

Bioresorbable Scaffolds (BRS)

A newer type of stent made from a material that dissolves over 2 to 3 years, leaving no permanent metal in the artery. Suitable for selected younger patients and specific anatomical situations.

Bare Metal Stents (BMS)

Older generation stents without drug coating. Higher restenosis rate than DES. Used in specific situations where long-term dual antiplatelet therapy is contraindicated (such as upcoming surgery).

Advanced Techniques Available at Germanten

Not all coronary blockages are straightforward. Our Cath Lab is equipped and our team is trained to handle complex interventions that many centers refer elsewhere.

  • IVUS (Intravascular Ultrasound):
    A miniature ultrasound probe inside the artery provides cross-sectional images of the vessel wall, allowing precise stent sizing and deployment confirmation that X-ray alone cannot provide.
  • OCT (Optical Coherence Tomography):
    High-resolution light-based imaging that visualizes plaque composition, stent apposition, and tissue coverage at a resolution ten times better than IVUS.
  • FFR (Fractional Flow Reserve):
    A pressure wire measurement that quantifies whether a blockage is significantly restricting blood flow. Allows cardiologists to identify which blockages actually need stenting versus which can be managed medically, reducing unnecessary procedures.
  • Rotational Atherectomy (Rotablation):
    For heavily calcified arteries that cannot be crossed or dilated with a standard balloon, a rotating diamond-tipped burr is used to debulk the calcified plaque before stenting.
  • CTO PCI (Chronic Total Occlusion):
    Complex techniques to open arteries that have been completely blocked for over three months, restoring blood flow to areas of hibernating heart muscle.

Recovery After Coronary Angioplasty

Hospital Stay

24 to 48 hours for elective cases. Emergency cases (primary PCI) typically 3 to 5 days.

Return to Office Work

Most patients within 5 to 7 days.

Driving

3 to 5 days after radial-access procedures (wrist). 1 to 2 weeks after femoral access.

Light Physical Activity

Walking encouraged from day 1 after discharge.

Cardiac Rehabilitation

Recommended for all post-angioplasty patients. Improves long-term outcomes significantly.

Medications

Dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin plus clopidogrel or ticagrelor) for 6 to 12 months minimum after DES implantation. Statin, beta-blocker, and ACE inhibitor as appropriate.

Follow-up

Cardiology review at 1 month, 6 months, and 12 months post-procedure as standard.

All post-angioplasty patients at Germanten are enrolled in our cardiac rehabilitation programme which significantly reduces the risk of recurrent events.

Risks and Complications

Coronary angioplasty is a well-established, low-risk procedure when performed by experienced operators in an equipped facility. Overall complication rates at high-volume centers are well below 1% for elective cases. Specific risks include:

  • Bruising or minor bleeding at the access site (most common, usually resolves within days)
  • Allergic reaction to contrast dye (rare, managed with premedication in at-risk patients)
  • Artery dissection or perforation (uncommon, usually managed within the Cath Lab)
  • Acute stent thrombosis (rare with appropriate antiplatelet therapy; risk below 1% at 30 days with DES)
  • Stroke (very rare, under 0.1% in elective cases)
  • Kidney injury from contrast dye (risk reduced by adequate hydration and minimizing dye volume)
  • Emergency bypass surgery requirement (extremely rare with modern techniques, under 0.1% in elective cases)

Emergency angioplasty for heart attack carries higher risk than elective procedures, reflecting the severity of the underlying condition rather than the procedure itself. Our team discusses individual risk in detail with every patient before proceeding.

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Cardiology Hospital Near You in Attapur, Hyderabad

Germanten Hospital is located in Attapur, one of South Hyderabad's most accessible neighborhoods. Patients from across southern and western Hyderabad can reach us within 20 to 30 minutes.

Full address: Germanten Hospital, Attapur, Hyderabad, Telangana 500048. View on Google Maps
Reaching Germanten Hospital from Major Localities:
  • - Mehdipatnam (approx. 8 minutes)
  • - Rajendra Nagar (approx. 10 minutes)
  • - Tolichowki (approx. 7 minutes)
  • - Banjara Hills (approx. 15 minutes)
  • - Jubilee Hills (approx. 18 minutes)
  • - Kondapur & Gachibowli (approx. 25 minutes via PVNR Expressway)
  • - Shamshabad & Airport Road (approx. 30 minutes)
GET ANSWERS

Frequently Asked Questions

A single-vessel elective angioplasty typically takes 45 to 90 minutes from start to finish. Emergency procedures for heart attack may be completed faster as the target artery is already identified from the ECG and clinical presentation. Complex multi-vessel or CTO procedures take 2 to 3 hours.
The procedure is performed under local anesthesia with sedation available. The access site is numbed so the needle and sheath insertion cause minimal discomfort. Patients may feel pressure sensations during balloon inflation or brief chest discomfort if the balloon temporarily interrupts blood flow. Most patients are surprised by how comfortable the procedure is. General anesthesia is not used for routine angioplasty.
Modern drug-eluting stents are permanent implants designed to last a lifetime. The stent becomes incorporated into the artery wall within months as tissue grows over it. The main concern is not stent failure but in-stent restenosis (scar tissue forming inside the stent) or stent thrombosis (clot forming on the stent). With current DES technology and appropriate antiplatelet therapy, both of these risks are below 2 to 3% over 5 years.
Yes. Multi-vessel PCI (treating more than one artery in the same session or in staged procedures) is performed routinely. The decision on whether to treat all vessels in one session or stage the procedures depends on the clinical scenario. In heart attack patients, most guidelines recommend treating the culprit artery first and addressing other blockages in a separate planned session once the patient is stable.
Yes. Germanten Hospital's Cath Lab is staffed and available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for emergency primary PCI. Our golden-hour protocol targets a door-to-balloon time of under 60 minutes. Call +91 9000909073 for cardiac emergencies or go directly to our casualty at Attapur, Hyderabad.