| Literature DB >> 11590901 |
M K Hong1.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11590901 PMCID: PMC4531719 DOI: 10.3904/kjim.2001.16.2.51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Intern Med ISSN: 1226-3303 Impact factor: 2.884
Mechanisms of restenosis and potential treatments
| Mechanism | Treatment | Availability |
|---|---|---|
| Acute Recoil | Stent | Yes |
| Thrombus Deposition | Antiplatelet therapy including glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors | Yes |
| Inflammation | Anti-inflammatory agent | Yes |
| Chronic Geometric Remodeling | Stent | Yes |
| Neointimal Hyperplasia | Antiproliferative agent/drug-eluting stent | Undergoing investigation |
| In-stent neointimal hyperplasia | Brachytherapy | Yes |
Figure 1.Angiographic (top panels) and intravascular ultrasound (bottom panels) findings in a patient with ostial left anterior descending coronary artery lesion (Left panels). The lesion was successfully treated with directional coronary atherectomy (DCA; Middle panels). However, seven months later, the patient returned with recurrent symptoms and restenosis (Right panels). Intravascular ultrasound demonstrated chronic geometric remodeling as the predominant mechanism of restenosis rather than neointimal hyperplasia. (Reproduced by permission from reference 7).
Figure 2.The ostial right coronary artery lesion was successfully treated with a Palmaz-Schatz stent (JJIS; Left panels). When the patient returned with restenosis (Right panels), intravascular ultrasound showed no change in stent dimension but severe neointimal hyperplasia as the cause of the in-stent restenosis. (Reproduced by permission from reference 7).