Surgery
The goals of surgery for
coronary artery disease (CAD) are to:
- Restore blood flow to the heart
muscle.
- Relieve chest pain (angina).
- Allow you to maintain or resume a
normal lifestyle. In some cases, surgery may allow you to live longer.
Although many people with CAD can be treated with medicine
or the non-surgical procedure
angioplasty, sometimes
coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) is needed. This
surgery routes blood flow around narrowed or blocked arteries by creating
detours using healthy blood vessels. Coronary artery bypass surgery is usually
an open-heart procedure.
Another type of surgery called
transmyocardial laser revascularization (TMR) may be used along with CABG. TMR
uses a laser beam to improve blood flow to heart muscle. TMR is not commonly
used.
In
angioplasty and
stenting—also called percutaneous coronary
intervention—thin flexible tubes (catheters) are inserted through arteries to
open blood vessels. For more information on these procedures, see the Other
Treatment section of this topic.
Surgery Choices
Coronary artery bypass
surgery (coronary artery bypass grafting, or CABG) increases blood flow
to the heart muscle tissue by using healthy artery or vein grafts to bypass
diseased sections of coronary arteries.
In rare cases,
transmyocardial laser revascularization (TMR) is used
along with CABG surgery. TMR uses a laser beam to improve blood flow to heart
muscle and may relieve chest pain.
What to Think About
Your choice of treatment
depends on the number of blocked arteries you have and how badly they are
blocked, the location of the blockage, as well as the specifics of your
condition, your overall health, whether you have diabetes, and your personal
preferences. In general, people with extensive CAD benefit more from bypass
surgery than angioplasty.24
- Significant blockage in the
left main
coronary artery
usually requires surgery. Coronary artery bypass graft
surgery, rather than angioplasty with stenting, is needed in most
cases. - If two or three heart arteries are blocked, the type of
treatment will depend on the location and severity of the blockages, how they
are affecting heart function, and how severe your symptoms are.
- If
only one artery is blocked (other than the left main artery), medicine or
angioplasty with stenting is most often used.
- If one of your
heart valves is defective, bypass surgery combined
with heart valve surgery may be required.
Understanding the advantages and disadvantages of each
treatment is important in making the right decision. Consider:
Surgery is not the best option for everyone. Changing your
lifestyle and taking medicine can be just as effective and may have less risk
for some people.
People who have heart surgery at hospitals that do
a large number of heart surgeries tend to have better results than those who
have surgery at hospitals that do fewer heart surgeries.