A 30-year-old woman was admitted because of persistent and severe hemoptysis in November 2005. She had been given a diagnosis of interstitial pneumonia (IP) and pulmonary aspergilloma in 2001, and she was treated with oral prednisolone and itraconazole. However she had persistent and intractable hemoptysis. Multi-detector row computed tomography (MDCT) revealed that hemoptysis from the right upper lobe did not originate in bronchial arteries, but the abnormal branches of the right subclavian artery. Surgery was not performed because of her pulmonary function, but she was successfully treated by non-bronchial arterial coil embolization. At 10 months after the embolization, hemoptysis has not recurred. MDCT was very useful for diagnosing the cause of hemoptysis and selective nonbronchial arterial coil embolization might be helpful in treating intractable or refractory hemoptysis.