A coronary CT angiogram shows you exactly what is going on inside your heart arteries: if they are healthy, have plaque buildup, or blockages in them. It creates a detailed 3D map of your coronary arteries so your doctor can see problems years before they cause symptoms. Here is what it reveals and what your results actually mean.
What does a CT angiogram of the heart show?
A coronary CT angiogram uses a CT scanner and contrast dye to produce high-resolution images of your heart arteries. The scan takes about 30 minutes most of which goes in preparation. The scan is painless and does not require a catheter. It shows three things that matter for your heart health.
What a coronary CT angiogram reveals
| What it shows | Why it matters to you |
|---|---|
| Soft (non-calcified) plaque | The dangerous kind. It can rupture and cause a heart attack. Most other tests cannot see it. |
| Hard (calcified) plaque | Stable buildup that tells you how long disease has been developing. |
| Narrowing (blockages) | How much your arteries are blocked and whether blood flow may be restricted. |
That combination of seeing both types of plaque plus the degree of narrowing is what makes this scan unique. A calcium score only sees hard plaque. A stress test only flags problems when blood flow is already significantly reduced. A CT angiogram gives you the full picture.
Why it matters
1 in 10 people with a calcium score of zero still have hidden soft plaque
A study of over 37,000 patients found that about 10% of people with a zero calcium score had non-calcified plaque visible on CT angiogram. That is plaque only a CT angiogram can find.
Can a CT scan detect coronary artery blockage?
Yes. A CT angiogram can spot plaque buildup when arteries are only 20 to 30% narrowed, years before symptoms appear. That early window is when lifestyle changes and medication are most effective. By the time a stress test flags a problem, arteries are typically 70% or more blocked and the disease is advanced.
Studies confirm that CT angiography has 94% accuracy for detecting coronary artery disease. When the scan finds no blockages, there is a 99% chance you truly do not have significant disease. That level of confidence is why the American Heart Association recommends it as a first-line test for evaluating chest pain.
How to read your CT angiogram results
Your CT angiogram report will use a system called CAD-RADS (Coronary Artery Disease Reporting and Data System). It is a standardized way for radiologists to communicate how much disease they found. Think of it as a grading scale from 0 to 5. Here is what each level means in plain English.
Understanding your CAD-RADS results
| CAD-RADS score | What it means | What typically happens next |
|---|---|---|
| 0: No disease | Clean arteries, no visible plaque | Keep doing what you are doing. Recheck based on risk factors. |
| 1: Minimal (1-24%) | Early plaque buildup, no significant narrowing | Focus on lifestyle. Your doctor may recheck in a few years. |
| 2: Mild (25-49%) | Moderate plaque, but not yet limiting blood flow | Talk to your doctor about medication and lifestyle changes. |
| 3: Moderate (50-69%) | Significant narrowing in one or more arteries | Likely needs medication. Your doctor may order additional testing. |
| 4: Severe blockage (70%+) | Major blockage that may be limiting blood flow | Cardiologist referral. May need a procedure like a stent or catheter angiogram. |
| 5: Full blockage | An artery is completely blocked | Specialist evaluation and intervention planning. |
CAD-RADS is the standardized reporting system used by radiologists. Your doctor will interpret your specific results alongside your full medical history.
Your report may also note the type of plaque found, soft, calcified, or mixed, and whether any plaque looks particularly concerning. This detail helps your doctor decide not just if you need treatment, but what kind.
What does a normal scan look like?
A normal result (CAD-RADS 0) means the scan found no visible plaque or narrowing in your coronary arteries. That is genuinely good news.
How reassuring is a clean scan?
A normal CT angiogram is linked to very low heart risk
Researchers followed over 2,000 people for 10 years after their CT angiogram. Those with clean results had less than a 1 in 250 chance of a heart attack over the entire decade. That is about as reassuring as a test can get.
Many people who get scanned fall into the CAD-RADS 0 or 1 range. If you are in that group, it does not mean you should stop paying attention. It means what you are doing is working. Keep it up, manage your cholesterol and blood pressure, stay active, and recheck down the road based on your doctor's recommendation.
Mild findings (CAD-RADS 1) are common and not alarming. They mean there is some early plaque, but your arteries are still wide open. The value of knowing this early is that you can make changes now, whether that is diet, exercise, or a statin, before the disease progresses. That is prevention at its best.
What this scan catches that other tests miss
The biggest advantage of a CT angiogram comes down to soft plaque. Soft plaque, also called non-calcified or vulnerable plaque, is the type most likely to rupture and trigger a heart attack. It has a thin outer shell and a lipid-rich core, making it unstable.
If you have risk factors like high Lp(a), a family history of heart disease, or diabetes, soft plaque is exactly what you want to check for. Finding it early means you and your doctor can start treatment, whether that is a statin, blood pressure management, or lifestyle changes, while the disease is still reversible. That is the real value of this scan.
The bottom line
If your results are clean, you get real peace of mind. If they show early buildup, you get the chance to act while your options are widest. Either way, you walk away knowing what is going on inside your arteries, and that knowledge puts you in control.
See the full picture of your heart arteries
Veevo Health's coronary CT angiogram gives you a detailed, non-invasive look at your heart arteries so you can take action early, with confidence.
References
- National Institutes of Health (StatPearls)
Cardiac CT angiography: sensitivity, specificity, and clinical applications
- Khalique et al., Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Non-calcified coronary plaque in asymptomatic patients with zero calcium score
- Kini et al., JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions
Vulnerable plaque characteristics: thin fibrous cap, lipid-rich core, and rupture risk
- American Heart Association
2021 AHA/ACC guideline for chest pain evaluation: CT angiography as first-line test
- JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging
10-year follow-up after coronary CT angiography in patients with suspected coronary artery disease
- Mayo Clinic
CT coronary angiogram: procedure overview and clinical use