Angiogram Overview

A minimally invasive test using X‑rays and contrast dye to visualize blood vessels and detect blockages or abnormalities.

Why It’s Done

Recommended for chest pain,

Shortness of breath

stroke symptoms, or unclear non‑invasive test results.

Leg pain while walking

Conditions Detected

Coronary artery disease

Aneurysms

AV malformations

Pulmonary embolism

Tumor vascularity

Peripheral artery disease

Types of Angiograms

Coronary

Cerebral

Pulmonary

Renal

DSA

Peripheral

How It Works

A thin catheter enters via wrist or groin; contrast highlights vessels under fluoroscopy to map narrowing or blockages.

 Is Angiogram Painful or Uncomfortable?

An angiogram is usually not painful You may feel brief pressure Afterward, minor soreness at the site typically fades in a few days.

Who Performs an Angiogram?

Cardiologists do heart angiograms; interventional radiologists handle vessels in other parts of the body.

During the Procedure

Local anesthesia, catheter placement, contrast injection, serial X‑rays; typical duration 30–60 minutes.

Recovery & Results

Short observation, hydrate, care for the puncture site; results often same day, with angioplasty/stent if needed.