catheterization is the percutaneous or surgical insertion of a catheter into vessels, heart chambers, bladder, or ducts to measure pressures, inject contrast, drain fluids, or deliver therapy. Catheterization involves advancing a flexible tube (catheter) via a peripheral access site (e.g., femoral/groin artery/vein, radial artery, neck vein, urethra) to targeted sites like coronary arteries, heart chambers (left/right), pulmonary arteries, or urinary bladder, enabling hemodynamic measurements, angiography (contrast injection for imaging), biopsy, angioplasty/stenting, or drainage. Common types include cardiac (diagnostic/therapeutic), urinary (Foley/straight cath), central venous (CVC), and peripheral arterial; it carries risks like bleeding, infection, arrhythmia, embolism, or vessel injury.
latin
• Catheter: Late Latincatheter from Greek kathetēr (καθετήρ) = “instrument to let something flow in” or “probe,” from kathiénai = “to let down/flow in” (kata- “down” + hiénai “to send”).
• -ization: Suffix indicating “process or action of” (from Greek -sis via French/Latin).
• Historical note: First described by ancient Egyptians/Greeks (e.g., urinary catheters from papyrus); modern cardiac cath pioneered by Werner Forssmann (1929, self‑experiment).
One‑Sentence Summary Catheterization (CPT 9345x cardiac, 5170x urinary; ICD‑10‑PCS 4A02XNX) inserts a catheter via percutaneous access to diagnose/treat via angiography/hemodynamics/drainage, most commonly for CAD (I25.1) or urinary issues, bundling injections/imaging with risks like bleeding (T82.7).