Medical School

  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Request a Topic
A coronary stent is a small tube (typically of metal framework) placed in the coronary arteries that supply the heart, to keep the arteries open in the treatment of coronary heart disease. It is used in a procedure called percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Stents reduce chest pain and have been shown to improve survivability in the event of an acute myocardial infarction. Similar stents and procedures are used in non-coronary vessels e.g. in the legs in peripheral artery disease.
However, as the stent is a foreign object (not native to the body), it incites an immune response. This may cause scar tissue (cell proliferation) to rapidly grow over the stent. In addition, there is a strong tendency for clots to form at the site where the stent damages the arterial wall. Since platelets are involved in the clotting process, patients must take dual antiplatelet therapy afterwards, usually clopidogrel and aspirin for one year and aspirin indefinitely. In order to reduce the treatment, a new generation of stent has been developed with biodegradable polymer.However, the dual antiplatelet therapy may be insufficient to fully prevent clots that may result in stent thrombosis; these and the cell proliferation may cause the standard (“bare-metal”) stents to become blocked (restenosis). Drug-eluting stents were designed to lessen this problem; by releasing an antiproliferative drug (drugs typically used against cancer or as immunosuppressants), they can help avoid this in-stent restenosis (re-narrowing).
Pop-upView Separately

A coronary stent is a small tube (typically of metal framework) placed in the coronary arteries that supply the heart, to keep the arteries open in the treatment of coronary heart disease. It is used in a procedure called percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Stents reduce chest pain and have been shown to improve survivability in the event of an acute myocardial infarction. Similar stents and procedures are used in non-coronary vessels e.g. in the legs in peripheral artery disease.

However, as the stent is a foreign object (not native to the body), it incites an immune response. This may cause scar tissue (cell proliferation) to rapidly grow over the stent. In addition, there is a strong tendency for clots to form at the site where the stent damages the arterial wall. Since platelets are involved in the clotting process, patients must take dual antiplatelet therapy afterwards, usually clopidogrel and aspirin for one year and aspirin indefinitely. In order to reduce the treatment, a new generation of stent has been developed with biodegradable polymer.However, the dual antiplatelet therapy may be insufficient to fully prevent clots that may result in stent thrombosis; these and the cell proliferation may cause the standard (“bare-metal”) stents to become blocked (restenosis). Drug-eluting stents were designed to lessen this problem; by releasing an antiproliferative drug (drugs typically used against cancer or as immunosuppressants), they can help avoid this in-stent restenosis (re-narrowing).

    • #medicine
    • #medical school
    • #biology
    • #anatomy
    • #heart
    • #cardiac
    • #science
  • 2 months ago
  • 671
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

671 Notes/ Hide

  1. dlsiratt likes this
  2. uraps reblogged this from medicalschool
  3. unlimitedwanderlust likes this
  4. brightlightsbetterworld likes this
  5. linfi reblogged this from valerimagine
  6. valerimagine reblogged this from arelyhepburn
  7. arelyhepburn reblogged this from medicalschool
  8. renatabonelli likes this
  9. sk8er likes this
  10. duzinha2 likes this
  11. cabinetcurio reblogged this from medicalschool
  12. karinabuz likes this
  13. cross-my-tea likes this
  14. constructinghabitus reblogged this from medicalschool
  15. chasing-thoseconds likes this
  16. cristondaa likes this
  17. thesilenceislove reblogged this from fuckyeahsurgery
  18. thesilenceislove likes this
  19. be-extramundane reblogged this from medicalschool
  20. talkingshrimp likes this
  21. midgetmonkey reblogged this from medicalschool
  22. bluebaby316 likes this
  23. aspiringmedica reblogged this from fuckyeahsurgery
  24. shishan reblogged this from medicalschool
  25. joebatfish likes this
  26. zeetharattlesnake reblogged this from medicalschool
  27. doubletheecho reblogged this from medicalschool
  28. serendipity9 likes this
  29. whatifyouleftme reblogged this from medicalschool
  30. whatifyouleftme likes this
  31. aznswagggg reblogged this from medicalschool
  32. peanutbutterloverrrr reblogged this from medicalschool and added:
    Wow.
  33. dita-von-geese likes this
  34. herestomedme reblogged this from medicalschool and added:
    A coronary stent is a small tube (typically of metal framework) placed in the coronary arteries that supply the heart,...
  35. andisfuck likes this
  36. orangeplaydough likes this
  37. chentryx likes this
  38. edgeofnirvana likes this
  39. totoyfasciola reblogged this from medicalschool
  40. markovan-nash reblogged this from medicalschool
  41. chelsy-dagger likes this
  42. inthespacecapsule reblogged this from medicalschool
  43. dragoncelt reblogged this from medicalschool and added:
    So awesome!
  44. sciencythings reblogged this from fuckyeahsurgery
  45. hipstergoth-zone reblogged this from kill-natalie
  46. 190590 likes this
  47. milktheworld reblogged this from faerie-sorcery
  48. morcante likes this
  49. mottsfrustration reblogged this from kill-natalie
  50. hormephobiaa likes this
  51. Show more notesLoading...
← Previous • Next →

Logo

About

Adventures in Medical School.
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Request a Topic
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union