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CATHETERIZATION
Diagnosis and treatment without surgery

Once destined for surgery, a number of patients with heart defects now can be treated with interventional, or therapeutic, cardiac catheterization procedures. 

At Texas Children’s Heart Center, the only area facility to offer such a service for infants, children and adolescents, approximately half of the nearly 350 catheterization procedures performed annually are therapeutic. The remaining 300 procedures are diagnostic. 

For certain cardiac defects, an interventional cardiac catheterization procedure can achieve the same result as an operation, and procedures can be performed in concert with surgery to help make the surgery more directed and effective.. 

 

With diagnostic catheterization, a small catheter, which resembles a long straw, is advanced into the heart through a large vein. A vein in an arm or leg usually is chosen. The catheter is directed into each heart chamber to measure the pressure, check the oxygen amount and inject dye to photograph the heart. This information is used to better determine the child’s cardiac abnormalities and decide if surgery is needed.

Intervention
Using the same technique, the cardiologist can manipulate special catheters through the heart chambers. These interventional procedures include opening heart valves which are closed or impeded; closing abnormal blood vessels and connections in the heart, arteries and veins; and closing holes in the heart. 
 

In some patients, holes can be made in the heart to decompress the pressure in one of the chambers. 

Although therapeutic cardiac catheterization for children was pioneered in the early 1970s, it was not until the mid-to-late 1980s that these procedures occurred regularly.

In some ways, therapeutic catheterization is a young field. The child receives intravenous sedation during the cardiac catheterization. The patient may go home that evening or the next morning. 

The child often resumes normal activities and is back at school within a day.