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May 2, 2003
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Medical
milestone changes future of cardiovascular care Researchers at the MGH,
BWH and Currently, metal stents
are implanted to prevent blood vessels on the heart from closing after
angioplasty, a procedure in which a balloon catheter is inserted to clear
blocked arteries. It is estimated that more than 20 percent of angioplasty
patients suffer this restenosis, a condition in which the arteries do
not heal well around the device and eventually narrow or close off again,
necessitating repeat angioplasty or heart bypass surgery.
"The study looked
at a wide variety of subsets of patients whom we treat with stents, including
both conventional patients as well as those with diabetes, hypertension,
long segments of narrowing and others at severe risk for restenosis,"
says Igor Palacios, MD, (left), director of the MGH Cardiac Catheterization
Laboratory. "Remarkably, the advantages of using the drug-coated
stent were seen in essentially all types of patients. Since most patients
appear to benefit, the implications The national clinical trial, which
was funded by Cordis Corporation, a unit of Johnson & Johnson Company and the maker of
the stent, |
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