​Angiography & Angioplasty with Clear Logic and Clinical Precision
Understand if you truly need an Angiography or a Stent before proceeding.
We approach angiography and angioplasty as a decision process, not just a procedure. Each case is analyzed step by step using symptoms, ECG, echo, stress testing, lab reports, and patient lifestyle. The goal is simple: correct treatment, no over-treatment.

What is our approach

Listen to
Symptoms
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Review
all reports
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Order only
necessary tests
Do angiography
Only if justified
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Decide medicine vs angioplasty vs surgery
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Explain everything to patient and family
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Final
Treatment
Regular
Follow up
What is Angiography and When is it Really Needed?

What angiography is - It is a test where dye is injected into heart arteries and X-ray videos are taken to see if blood flow is blocked or normal.
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When it is useful - It is most useful when symptoms, ECG, echo, or stress test strongly suggest the possibility of a significant blockage that needs quick and clear confirmation.
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When it is not needed - not needed for mild, stable symptoms that are well controlled with medicines and show low or no risk on basic tests.
Safety - It is a common and generally safe procedure. It takes mostly just 10 - 15 minutes. Patients go home the same day.
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What is Angiography
Watch this video before deciding about angiography
Safety of Angiography
What is Angioplasty
How to Select a Stent
What is Angioplasty and Who Really Needs It?

What angioplasty does - it opens a narrowed heart artery using a small balloon and also a stent in many cases.

When stent helps - A stent helps when the block is so significant that medicines are not enough and after opening with a balloon, there is high chance of reblockage.

When medicines are better - Medicines are often enough when blockages are mild, symptoms are stable, and blood flow is adequate despite some narrowing.

How stent type is chosen - Stent choice depends on many factors like artery size, length/location of blockage, presence of calcium, bleeding risk, how long blood-thinning medicines can be safely taken etc.
Advised Angiography or Stent, but Not Sure?
Before proceeding, it helps to review your reports calmly with an experienced cardiologist. Not every blockage needs a procedure. Sometimes medicines are enough. Get clear, unbiased guidance so you can decide with confidence.
You receive:
* Review of your reports
* Simple explanation of options
* Honest advice. Medicines vs procedure
* No pressure to proceed
(For stable patients only. In emergencies, seek immediate hospital care)

Post Procedure Care
is as Important as the Procedure
Care After Angiography
Care After Angioplasty



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