Title of article :
The history of interventional cardiology: Cardiac catheterization, angioplasty, and related interventions
Author/Authors :
Richard L. Mueller، نويسنده , , Timothy A. Sanborn، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The histories of cardiac catherization, angioplasty, and other catheter interventions are spectacular journeys marked by undeterred genius, serendipity, and the vindication of the scientific method. Cardiac catheterization began with Halesʹs 1711 equine biventricular catheterization, other early experimental catheterizations in the nineteenth century, and Forssmannʹs dramatic 1929 right-heart self-catheterization. Cournand, Richards, and others finished unlocking the right heart in the 1940s; Zimmerman, Cope, Ross, and other unlocked the left heart in the 1950s; and the coronary arteries were inadvertently unlocked by Sones in 1958, leading to the advent of percutaneous femoral coronary angiography by Judkins and by Amplatz in 1967. Dotterʹs accidental catheter recanalization of a peripheral artery in 1963 ushered in the era of intervention, crowned by Gruentzigʹs balloon angioplasty in the mid-41970s and leading to todayʹs panoply of devices used percutaneously to revascularize the coronary arteries in a variety of clinical settings.