Catheter directed thrombolytic therapy is a nonsurgical treatment for acute deep vein thrombosis (DVT) that dissolves blood clots. These clots typically occur in your leg, thigh or pelvis but can travel. If a DVT travels to your lungs (referred to as a pulmonary embolism or PE), it can cause shortness of breath, chest pain and lead to death.
This therapy may be your next step if blood thinners do not dissolve a DVT or PE.
This therapy is performed in a catheterization lab or radiology suite. A team of doctors and nurses work together using a thin plastic tube (catheter) to deliver clot-dissolving medications called thrombolytics directly to the clot.
BRUISING, BLEEDING OR SWELLING where the tube entered your body. This occurs infrequently, in 1-3% of cases.
BLEEDING ELSEWHERE can occur, such as in your intestines or brain. This is rare.