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Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)

Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Coronary artery stenting. Dr Neil W. Bressloff. Coronary Artery Disease. Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) is a condition caused by the accumulation of plaque (usually atheromatous or fibrous plaque) on the inner walls of the artery.

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Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)

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  1. Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) Coronary artery stenting Dr Neil W. Bressloff

  2. Coronary Artery Disease • Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) is a condition caused by the accumulation of plaque (usually atheromatous or fibrous plaque) on the inner walls of the artery. Coronary Arteries(1) Plaque in a coronary artery(2) Angiogram showing stenotic region(3) • GNU Free Documentation License - http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:GNU_Free_Documentation_License • Creative Commons License - http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/ • Antonio Colombo and Goran Stankovic. Colombo’s Tips & Tricks with Drug-Eluting Stents. Taylor and Francis Group, 2005.

  3. Stents as a treatment to CAD • Stents are a most common treatment for CAD • They are tubular structures (often meshes) which are inserted in the stenotic region through a balloon catheter and then expanded through plastic deformation. • Stents are primarily inserted to provide a scaffolding feature. • Drug eluting stents (DES) are coated with an anti-proliferative drug. • National heart lung and blood institute (nlhbi). • http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/Angioplasty/Angioplasty All.html. Stenting procedure(1)

  4. Key challenge with using stents • Restenosis - reduction in lumen size as a result of formation of the neointima within 12 months of the stent-implant • Thrombosis - formation of a blood clot, thrombus, inside a blood vessel. Restenosis(1) Thrombosis(2) • Rossella Balossino. A computational study of minimally-invasive devices for the treatment of coronary disease. PhD thesis, Politecnico di Milano. • David Faxon. Restenosis: a guide to therapy. Informa Health Care, illustrated edition, 2001.

  5. Geometry Construction • Representative models of the ART stent and Bx VELOCITY are constructed using Rhinoceros 4.0 ART stent – Flat model Bx VELOCITY – Flat model ART stent Bx VELOCITY stent

  6. Meshing • Tool used for meshing and CFD runs: Star CCM+ 3.06.006

  7. Velocity profiles- the ART stent

  8. Velocity profiles – Bx VELOCITY stent

  9. Haemodynamics and drug releaseNIR stent CD-Adapco 2010 calendar

  10. Stent ExpansionCYPHER stent

  11. Drug elutionBVS stent (in expanded state)

  12. FlexibilityBVS B stent (Abbott Vascular)

  13. Multi-objective design Balloon expansion; structural integrity Haemodynamics: re-endothelialisation Optimal design: patient specific Systematic design search and optimisation: Towards a novel, fully biodegradable drug eluting coronary stent Recover and maintain healthy blood flow but then disappear Drug elution: control of restenosis Flexibility

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