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What Is Coronary Artery Disease?
Doctors define coronary artery disease, also known as heart disease, as a narrowing of the blood vessels that supply oxygen-rich blood and nutrients to the heart.
A gradual build-up of cholesterol-containing deposits (plaque) on the walls of the arteries (atherosclerosis) can cause coronary artery disease.
Plaque narrows or blocks the arteries, reducing blood flow to the heart muscle.
This can result in:
- Chest pain (angina)
- Heart attack
- Death
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What Are The Signs And Symptoms Of Coronary Artery Disease?
Coronary artery disease, or heart disease, may develop slowly over many years. It often can go unnoticed until serious symptoms develop.
Serious symptoms of coronary artery disease — including heart attack and instant death — can occur without warning.
More common symptoms include:
- Chest pain, which may feel like pressure or squeezing pain in your chest.
- Pain or pressure in your shoulders, arms, neck, jaw, or back.
- Shortness of breath.
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How Do You Diagnose Coronary Artery Disease?
If you go to the emergency room with chest pain, some tests will be done right away to determine if you are experiencing angina or a heart attack.
Your doctor will order tests to:
- Obtain precise measures of cardiac function.
- Rule out other possible causes.
- Determine the best treatment.
Testing for coronary artery disease may include:
The UPMC Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program uses state-of-the-art diagnostic tests and procedures not found at other medical centers in the Pittsburgh region. Our highly advanced equipment provides unprecedented views of the heart and coronary arteries.
Testing results
Your doctor or nurse will tell you when to expect your test results and will call you when they're available.
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How Do You Treat Coronary Artery Disease?
UPMC’s integrated team of cardiologists and other specialists work together to provide a full range of treatment options for coronary artery disease, also called heart disease.
Tailored to the cause and severity of your coronary artery disease, your treatment may include:
Medicines
- Relieve chest pain.
- Prevent progression of coronary artery disease.
- Improve blood flow to the heart.
Lifestyle changes to prevent or slow heart disease:
- Regular exercise
- Healthy diet
- Smoking cessation
Catheter-assisted procedures and bypass surgery can help open blocked arteries.
Procedures for treating coronary artery disease
- Interventional procedures — nonsurgical treatments to open the artery, such as a cardiac catheterization with stenting or balloon angioplasty.
- Coronary bypass graft surgery — to restore blood flow to the heart muscle using blood vessels from other parts of the body.
UPMC's Cardiac Catheterization Program specialists perform more than 20,000 diagnostic and interventional cardiac catheterization procedures each year.
And surgeons at the Heart and Vascular Institute performed more than 950 coronary artery bypass graft surgeries at UPMC hospitals last year.
Last reviewed by a UPMC medical professional on 2024-10-01.