- An I.V. (intravenous) line will be put in a vein in your arm or hand. You may be given medicine to help you relax (sedation) through the I.V.
- You will be given medicine to help prevent pain during the procedure.
- The doctor will make a cut (incision) through your skin and into the blood vessel with the clot. Or they will make a cut in another blood vessel, so that a tube may be put in to reach the clot. A dye test (angiogram or venogram) may be used to help the doctor see the blood vessel and clot on a video screen.
- The doctor will remove the clot from the blood vessel.
- The doctor may use a thin tube (catheter) to remove any part of the clot that remains. They may put a small mesh tube (stent) in the blood vessel to help hold the vessel open. This is not removed.
- The blood vessel is closed.
- The incision is closed and bandaged.
If you've had a stroke, your doctor may advise a procedure called mechanical thrombectomy. A catheter is put into an artery and guided to the clot in the brain. Doctors often use the femoral artery for this. The doctor puts a clot-removing device through the catheter until it reaches the clot. The doctor removes the clot.