scholarly journals Response of very small (2 mm) porcine coronary arteries to balloon angioplasty and stent implantation

Heart ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 324-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
A C Morton ◽  
N D Arnold ◽  
D C Crossman ◽  
J Gunn

Objective: To investigate the response of very small coronary arteries to stent deployment and balloon angioplasty.Setting: Normal porcine coronary arteries.Methods: 24 pigs underwent intervention to two main coronary arteries, in segments 2.0 mm in diameter, with balloons whose diameter was 2.5 mm at standard pressure. Twelve arteries received a BiodivYsio small vessel (SV) stent; 12 an NIR SV stent; 12 standard BiodivYsio stent, and 12 balloon only. The arteries were harvested at 28 days, fixed, embedded in plastic, and cut and ground in cross section. The injury score and histomorphometry were assessed.Results: The BiodivYsio SV stent was associated with 20% less injury (p  =  0.16), a 30% larger lumen (p  =  0.13), and a 25% smaller neointima (p  =  0.03) than the NIR SV stent, despite identical oversize. The standard BiodivYsio stent exhibited less recoil but 29% greater injury (p  =  0.01), 59% more neointima (p  =  0.00), and 18% less lumen (p  =  0.27) than the BiodivYsio SV. Of all interventions, balloon only was associated with little injury, little neointima, major vessel shrinkage, and the largest lumen.Conclusion: Despite uniform oversize dilatation, both injury and response varied widely in very small porcine coronary arteries, depending on whether a stent or balloon was used, the stent design, and the number and/or thickness of struts. The response to different stent designs is considerable and is related to the degree of injury.

2004 ◽  
Vol 93 (10) ◽  
pp. 1233-1237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clara Hanekamp ◽  
Jacques Koolen ◽  
Hans Bonnier ◽  
Keith Oldroyd ◽  
Menko-Jan de Boer ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 1331-1337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sugao Ishiwata ◽  
Stefan Verheye ◽  
Keith A Robinson ◽  
Mahomed Y Salame ◽  
Hector de Leon ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 25 (04) ◽  
pp. 1350056
Author(s):  
Alireza Sanati ◽  
Kamran Hassani ◽  
Mahdi Navidbakhsh

Stent implantation alters coronary artery hemodynamic and wall shear stress during cardiac cycles. In this study, three-dimensional models were used to analyze the effects of different stent designs and strut thicknesses on the hemodynamic of the artery. The flow was assumed to be pulsatile and stent models were expanded in the artery the same as angioplasty procedure that uses balloon. The data was applied to Fluent-ANSYS package as a UDF MATLAB code. A non-slip condition was applied to the artery walls. The pressure variation in different stents and the wall shear stress distribution were studied. Furthermore, the hemodynamic effects on the flow were investigated for two different thickness values of the same stent design. These results showed that stent implanting is one of the main parameters of pressure drop in the artery. Moreover, the surface of the stent is the location of maximum wall shear stress and the thicker stent strut did not vary this stress much. Our study implies that some design parameters such as thickness affect the hemodynamic factors of blood after stent implantation. Even stent implanting causes re-stenosis in the coronary artery. Using new real models is suggested to investigate new aspects of stent design and related effects on the hemodynamic of coronary arteries.


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