| Literature DB >> 19949631 |
Sun Hong Yoo1, Seung Won Jin, Sung Ho Her, Hee Jeoung Yoon, Hyoung Doo Kim, Yun Sun Im, Ki Bae Seung, Jae Hyung Kim.
Abstract
Coronary stent fractures have been suggested as a potential new mechanism of restenosis. The mechanical properties of stents were designed not only to prevent vessel recoil, but also to resist the mechanical stress of vessel movement over millions of cardiac cycles. We present a case in which mechanical stress may have contributed to the fracture of a stent implanted in a saphenous vein graft (SVG) to the left coronary artery. The patient was admitted due to chest pain 2 years after receiving a coronary artery bypass graft. A coronary angiography revealed the culprit vessel to be the SVG to the left coronary artery. The graft was stenosed and was stented with a sirolimus-eluting stent. A 6-month follow-up coronary angiography revealed 80% in-stent restenosis with stent fracture. We re-intervened by balloon angioplasty. This is the first report of sirolimus-eluting stent fracture combined with restenosis of SVG in Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Coronary artery bypass grafting; Drug-eluting stents
Year: 2009 PMID: 19949631 PMCID: PMC2771840 DOI: 10.4070/kcj.2009.39.6.251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean Circ J ISSN: 1738-5520 Impact factor: 3.243