What are coronary artery stents?
A stent is a tiny device made of surgical stainless steel
that is placed inside an artery to hold it open and allow
blood to flow through the blood vessel.
When are coronary stents used?
Coronary stents are used as a routine part of most
angioplasty procedures. They cannot be used when the artery
being treated is small or very curved or twisted. Stents
have made emergency coronary bypass surgery during
angioplasty far less common. Coronary stents can be used
during an acute heart attack to quickly restore blood flow
to the heart muscle and limit damage from the attack.
How do I prepare for the procedure?
Talk with your healthcare provider about what medicines you
should take before the procedure. Your doctor may prescribe
medicine to prevent blood clots from forming during the
procedure. If you are taking daily aspirin for a medical
condition, ask your provider if you need to stop taking it
before your surgery.
- Plan for your care and transportation after the
procedure and during recovery at home.
- Your healthcare provider will ask you not to eat or
drink anything after midnight on the night before the
procedure.
- You may have blood tests, an electrocardiogram
(ECG), and a chest X-ray before the procedure.
- Someone at the hospital will shave and wash the area
where the catheter will be inserted (arm or groin) to
help prevent infection.
What happens during the procedure?
You will receive medicine in a vein to make you sleepy and
to take pain away. You will also receive a shot to numb the
area where a tube (catheter) is inserted. The stent comes
tightly wrapped around a deflated balloon at the tip of the
catheter. A catheter is a thin tube inserted into a blood
vessel either at the elbow or groin. The catheter is pushed
through the blood vessel to the blockage in the artery.
Inflating a balloon at the tip of the catheter stretches the
narrowed artery and expands the stent. After the stent is
fully expanded, the balloon is deflated, and the catheter
and balloon are withdrawn. The stent stays behind to hold
open the blood vessel.
What happens after the procedure?
The stent remains in your blood vessel. Over time, it may
become covered with tissue from the inner lining of your
coronary artery. While this is happening, blood may begin
to form a clot on the surface of the stent. Blood thinning
drugs are given to stop the blood clot from forming on the
surface of the stent in the newly opened artery. Usually,
these blood thinning drugs are a combination of aspirin and
a medicine called clopidogrel. You will take them until the
stent is covered with lining tissue, a process that takes at
least a month.
Many stents release a drug from a special coating on the
stent. The drug prevents scar tissue from growing and
blocking the artery. The drug slows the growth of normal
tissue as well as scar tissue. You may need to take blood
thinners for at least 3 to 6 months if you have this kind of
stent.
You will probably be asked to take aspirin every day for the
rest of your life. The aspirin is not always necessary if
you are taking other blood thinners that prevent clotting.
What are the risks?
- It is sometimes hard to place the stents properly in
arteries where the arteries twist and turn. The artery may
close in spite of the stent if it is not put in exactly the
right place.
- For a few people, arteries may become blocked again
within 3 to 6 months after the stent is put in.
- Sometimes a blood clot may form on the stent within a few
days or weeks after it is put in place. Blood thinning
medicines are important to help prevent this.
What are the benefits?
The main value of stents is that they decrease the chance of
the blockage coming back after angioplasty. They can also
prevent or treat a lot of damage to the blood vessel during
angioplasty.
Written by Donald L. Warkentin, MD.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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