Cardiac catheterization does not require much preparation, although you may have to avoid eating or drinking for up to eight hours before your procedure. Your physician will provide instructions for how to prepare for your procedure. Follow them closely.
At the hospital, you will receive an intravenous sedative to keep you calm but awake during the procedure in the cardiac catheterization lab. A nurse will clean and shave the place where the physician will insert the catheter, usually your groin. You should not hurt or feel any pain because the insertion site will be numbed.
Cardiac catheterizations typically take about an hour. Afterward, you will rest in the hospital for several hours so the medical team can monitor your heart and make sure the puncture site stops bleeding.
Make sure you have someone drive you home, because you will be released the same day with instructions on when you can resume normal activities and how to care for the puncture if it starts to bleed. You may be able to return to your regular routine the day after your procedure.