Skip Navigation

Display Mode:

  • Choose Default Style
  • Choose High Contrast
Sutter Health Sacramento Sierra Region
  • Home
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Local Hospitals
  • Find a Doctor
  • Services
  • Learn About Your Health
  • Career Center
Section TitleServices
  • Sutter Heart & Vascular Institute
    • About the Heart & Vascular Institute
    • Physicians
    • Procedures
    • Conditions
    • Prevention
    • Heart & Vascular Institute Services
    • For Patients
    • Research & Trials
    • Patient Stories
    • Video & Audio Library
    • Contact the Heart & Vascular Institute
    Main content

    Percutaneous Transluminal
    Angioplasty (PTA)
    Sutter Heart & Vascular Institute

    Why is the doctor performing this procedure?

    To open up peripheral arteries that are narrowed or blocked by plaque build-up (atherosclerosis). The peripheral arteries most commonly affected by atherosclerosis are:

    • Cerebral arteries in the brain
    • Carotid arteries in the neck
    • Renal arteries leading to the kidneys
    • Abdominal arteries
    • Iliac arteries in the groin
    • Femoropopliteal arteries in the thigh
    • Infrapopliteal arteries in the knee
    What is the procedure?

    Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty is commonly called PTA, or just angioplasty. A catheter is inserted into an artery - usually in the groin - but sometimes in the arm or wrist. The catheter is advanced to the blocked artery, and a series of x-ray pictures are taken to clearly visualize the artery that is narrowed. Then a balloon-tipped catheter is advanced into the narrowed artery. Inside the artery, the balloon is inflated and deflated several times, compressing the plaque against the artery wall and widening the artery so blood flow improves.
    X-rays pictures are repeated, and if the artery has been successfully re-opened, the catheters are removed. Pressure is applied to the puncture site (to stop bleeding) while the patient rests quietly.

    Where is the procedure performed?

    In the Catheterization Lab or Peripheral Angiography Suite.

    How long does this procedure take?

    PTA (angioplasty) usually takes 1-2 hours.

    Which facilities perform this procedure?
    Sutter Medical Center, Sacramento
    Sutter Roseville Medical Center
    Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital
    Sutter Heart & Vascular Institute
    Procedures at Sutter Heart Institute
    Search for Procedures
    • Search by Category
    • Search by Title
    • Surgical Outcomes
    Patient Stories
    Betty & Jim - A Testament to True Heart Care
    Rodgers and Hammerstein's hit musical Annie Get Your Gun has been a popular production for theatre companies since it first played on Broadway in 1946. It's no wonder that Sacramento residents Betty and Jim Saggs were excited when they saw the production listed at their local community center. So excited, that Betty wasn't going to let a little shortness of breath and a slight pain in her neck keep her from seeing the show.
    Read Betty & Jim's story
    Read More Patient Stories
    • About Our Sutter Health Network
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Accessibility

    © 2011 Sutter Health Sacramento Sierra Region. All rights reserved.