
Dr. Harsh Ajit Tilwani
Consultant - Interventional Cardiology

Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) is a specialized heart procedure used to check how well blood is flowing through the arteries that supply the heart (coronary arteries). Doctors use FFR during a coronary angiography procedure to measure whether a blockage in a heart artery is severe enough to reduce blood flow to the heart muscle.
Some heart artery blockages may look severe on scans but may not actually reduce blood flow significantly. On the other hand, some moderate-looking blockages can seriously affect blood supply to the heart.
FFR helps decide whether medicines alone are enough, or whether a stent or angioplasty is needed.
FFR is performed during coronary angiography. A very thin pressure-monitoring wire is passed through the heart artery to measure blood flow before and after a blockage. The test compares blood pressure on both sides of the narrowing to determine how much the blockage is affecting blood supply.
Most patients go home the same day or within 24 hours.
Most patients recover quickly and return to normal activities within 1–2 days.
Even if no stent is needed, lifestyle changes and medicines remain important to control heart disease. Regular follow-up helps monitor symptoms and heart health.
Every artery blockage needs a stent.
Some blockages can be treated safely with medicines alone.
FFR is open-heart surgery.
FFR is a minimally invasive catheter-based test.
A blockage that looks severe always needs treatment.
FFR checks whether blood flow is truly reduced.
FFR itself treats the blockage.
FFR helps doctors decide the best treatment option.
Most patients feel little discomfort because local anaesthesia is used.
Not always. FFR helps determine whether a stent is truly necessary.
Many patients are discharged on the same day or within 24 hours.
Yes. FFR helps doctors avoid stenting blockages that are not significantly affecting blood flow.
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