A Brief look at the Modern day History of treating clogged heart arteries
By MyOverseasDoctor on Aug 7, 2007 in ANGIOPLASTY, HEART BYPASS
The history of clearing clogged coronary arteries and implanting is one of progress and setbacks:
1960s: Coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (CABG) is introduced to repair arteries clogged with plaque. Surgeons harvest healthy veins from a patient’s legs and transplant them around blocked arteries near the heart, restoring blood flow.
The problem: Although effective, it’s a major operation. Surgeons saw through the patient’s sternum and pry open the rib cage. About 500,000 such surgeries a year are performed.
1977: Doctors begin to unclog arteries with balloon angioplasty. They make a small slit in the patient’s groin, run a wire-like catheter up the femoral artery and inflate a tiny balloon inside the plaque blockage, opening it, restoring blood flow.
The problem: Within six months, one-third to one-half of patients experience a re-narrowing of the artery due to plaque, called “restenosis.”
1986: Pharmaceutical companies bring out the “bare-metal stent” a tiny metal-mesh sleeve that is collapsed, run up the femoral artery to the plaque lesion, expanded by the balloon and left to keep the artery open.
The problem: In 15 percent to 30 percent of cases, restenosis still occurred within a year.
The reason: Ideally, when a wire-mesh is implanted, the artery heals it over in a few months with smooth muscle cells called endothelia. But in some cases, the cells grow back too aggressively, piling up into scar tissue, narrowing the artery again and encouraging a new blockage with plaque.
2003: The “drug-eluting stent” arrives. It’s coated with medicine that is released over a month or more to slow the growth of the cells that encourage restenosis. They were a hit - cutting re-blockage by two-thirds.
The problem: Occasionally a patient with a drug-eluting stent suffers a heart attack, and sometimes it’s fatal. Studies say it happens more often with drug-eluting stents than with bare-metal stents. It isn’t restenosis; it’s thrombosis, a sudden blood clot that forms inside the drug-eluting stent.
The reason: While the drug-eluting stent is time-releasing its drugs, it effectively stops the re-growth of muscle cells inside the stent.Thus, the bloodstream reacts to the foreign metal object - the bare stent - the same way the blood in your cheek reacts to the nick of a razor - it clots. Result: a heart attack.
Today the debate rages on; doctors in favor of creating better stents vs. doctors who would forgo angioplasty altogether in favor of open-heart surgery.
Sources: Fred Tasker - McClatchy Newspapers, Ohio.com




















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