2. What is a Stent
• A small, mesh-like
device made of metal
• Acts as a support or
scaffold, in keeping
the vessel open
• Stent helps to improve blood flow to the heart
muscle and reduce the pain of angina
• 80% of patients who have balloon angioplasty
will have a stent placed as well.
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3. Types
Bare metal stents:
– Traditional method
– May have an increased rate of
re-narrowing due to growth of scar
tissue in the stent, a condition
called Restenosis.
Drug-eluting stents:
-Combat Restenosis
- Coated with medications that are slowly released to
block the body's ability to form scar tissue
around the stent. The medication is delivered
directly to the site of the artery blockage.
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4. History
• Percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) by Gruntzig in 1977
• Puel and Sigwart, in 1986, deployed the first coronary stent to act as a
scaffold
• In 2001, drug-eluting stents (DES) were introduced as a strategy to minimize
restenosis
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5. Procedure
• First a catheter is inserted in the groin or arm. After the catheter is
in place a wire will be guided through the artery until it reaches the
blockage in the heart. A soft, flexible catheter tube will be slipped
over the wire and threaded up to the blockage.
• The doctor will be taking x-ray pictures during the procedure and
dye will be injected into the arteries of your heart.
• Once the blockage is reached, a small balloon at the tip of the
catheter will be rapidly inflated and deflated. This will stretch the
artery open.
• The collapsed stent will be inserted. The balloon will be inflated
again to expand the stent to its full size. The stent will be left in
place to hold the vessel walls open. The deflated balloon, catheter,
and wire will be removed.
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7. Future Advancements
• The ReZolve™ stent integrates a proprietary drug-
eluting polymer and a novel design to create a stent
with metal-like performance out of a polymer
material.
• The stent restores blood flow and supports the
artery through healing, then completely dissolves
from the body, leaving the patient free of a
permanent implant.
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8. Future
Advancements
• Unlike permanent metal alloys, the REVA polymer
dissolves from the body after healing of the artery
has occurred, leaving additional treatment options
available in the future.
• Another unique feature of the polymer is that it is
visible under x-ray, allowing the stent to be visualized
during the implant procedure and at follow up. Other
bioresorbable polymer stents are invisible and
require permanently attached radiopaque markers to
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10. This platform has been started by Parveen
Kumar Chadha with the vision that nobody
should suffer the way he has suffered
because of lack and improper healthcare
facilities in India. We need lots of funds
manpower etc. to make this vision a reality
please contact us. Join us as a member for
a noble cause.
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of the 25,000
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Looking forward for franchise,
collaboration, partners.
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