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circumflex artery
circumflex artery

... The left coronary artery distributes blood to the left side of the heart, the left atrium and ventricle, and the interventricular septum The circumflex artery arises from the left coronary artery The larger anterior interventricular artery, also known as the left anterior descending artery (LAD), is ...
Duration of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy after Coronary Stent Placement
Duration of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy after Coronary Stent Placement

... artery 1. Dual therapy with antiplatelet medications is recommended to reduce this risk for stent thrombosis5 2. Stent Thrombosis occurs primarily in the first 30 days after stent placement a) Overall prevalence ranges from 0.2% - 0.6% per year6 b) However mortality after stent thrombosis can be as ...
Coronary Artery Disease Angina Acute Coronary Syndrome
Coronary Artery Disease Angina Acute Coronary Syndrome

... – used to evaluate type of interventional therapies most suited: angioplasty, atherectomy, stenting, LASER) surgery, medication only ...
association of hyperhomocystinemia with acute myocardial
association of hyperhomocystinemia with acute myocardial

... were measured quantitatively on machine Axym Plus System (Abbott). ...
ACS - bjclearn
ACS - bjclearn

... – ECG changes may occur • No sustained ST segment elevation. – Can limit the area of infarction through medical and nursing interventions ...
Anticoagulants, Thrombolytics Agents and Antiplatelet Drugs
Anticoagulants, Thrombolytics Agents and Antiplatelet Drugs

... Anagrelide (Argylin™) ...
The Client with Altered Cardiac Output
The Client with Altered Cardiac Output

... • Atherosclerosis • Most common cause of CAD • The abnormal accumulation of plaques on the vessel wall • Causes narrowing then eventually blockages in the coronary arteries that reduces myocardial blood flow = CAD • Asymptomatic until 75% occlusion of coronary artery lumen. ...
View PDF - European Heart Journal - Quality of Care and Clinical
View PDF - European Heart Journal - Quality of Care and Clinical

... The costs of myocardial revascularisation procedures have evolved over time as new technologies have become available. In the pre-stent era the cost of a coronary artery bypass operation was estimated to be nearly twice the cost of a coronary balloon angioplasty procedure, but this difference attenu ...
S0735109705017675_mmc1
S0735109705017675_mmc1

... preceding 10 days. Patients had to be in stable condition and were to be enrolled after a percutaneous revascularization procedure if one was planned. Finally, patients had to have a total cholesterol level of 240 mg/dl (6.21 mmol/l) or less, measured at the local hospital within the first 24 h afte ...
Investigations of Coronary Artery Disease Electrocardiogram
Investigations of Coronary Artery Disease Electrocardiogram

... Holter monitoring is used to detect abnormal electrical conduction in the heart and abnormal cardiac rhythm. It can also record ischaemic changes even if the patient is asymptomatic. ...
Do Angiographic Characteristics Explain Racial Differences In
Do Angiographic Characteristics Explain Racial Differences In

... the catheter and spine are seen on the right side of the image, while in the RAO (figure 2) they are found on the right. ...
Drugs for Angina Pectoris, Myocardial Infarction
Drugs for Angina Pectoris, Myocardial Infarction

... pharmacotherapy may include thrombolytics, aspirin, beta-blockers, and antidysrhythmics. Myocardial infarction is caused by a thrombus in a coronary artery and is responsible for a substantial number of sudden deaths. Fast, effective diagnosis and treatment can reduce mortality. 25.11 If given withi ...
EBCT Screening and Survival, A Successful Niche Scanning Business
EBCT Screening and Survival, A Successful Niche Scanning Business

... Noninvasive EBA coronary imaging ...
Document
Document

... • All stages of hypertension are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease events. • Stage 1 is the most common form of high blood pressure in the adult population. • Hypertension is caused by increases in cardiac output, total peripheral resistance, or both. – Cardiac output is incre ...
Anomalous origin of left coronary artery from pulmonary
Anomalous origin of left coronary artery from pulmonary

... fibrosis is always present and patients dying in infancy usually leave evidence of anterolateral myocardial infarction. A considerable amount of LV dysfunction in infants must be ischemic in origin. There are some reasons for mitral regurgitation. There may be extensive fibrosis and sometime calcifi ...
Coronary artery bypass grafting surgery.
Coronary artery bypass grafting surgery.

... events, and possibly mortality, for patients undergoing primary PCI Therapeutic Procedures • ST elevation connotes an acute coronary occlusion and thus warrants immediate reperfusion therapy • Primary PCI is the approach of choice in patients with absolute and many relative contraindications to thro ...
What is Dual Antiplatelet Therapy (DAPT)?
What is Dual Antiplatelet Therapy (DAPT)?

... Antiplatelet agents are a class of drugs that inhibit the platelets from clumping together and forming blood clots. Many heart attack and stroke patients — and people seeking to avoid these events — are treated with two types of antiplatelet agents to prevent blood clotting. This is called dual anti ...
Coronary Artery Disease - National Jewish Health
Coronary Artery Disease - National Jewish Health

... • Coronary CT: During a coronary CT angiogram pictures are taken of cross sections or slices of the heart. A coronary artery calcium scoring CT can detect and measure the extent of the calcium deposits in the coronary arteries. • Cardiac Catheterization. This is a minimally invasive test which not o ...
slides#14 - DENTISTRY 2012
slides#14 - DENTISTRY 2012

... inadequate coronary blood flow even at rest. ...
M yocardial infarction
M yocardial infarction

...  Myocardial infarction refers to the process by which myocardial tissue is destroyed in regions of the heart that are deprived of an adequate blood supply because of a reduced coronary blood flow (a prolonged lack of myocardial oxygenation leading to necrosis of a portion of the heart muscle). ...
Does pheochromocytoma mimic or cause acute myocardial infarction?
Does pheochromocytoma mimic or cause acute myocardial infarction?

... remind us of the possibility that myocardial damage with the clinical picture of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) may result from pheochromocytoma (Pheo). We strongly agree that keeping in mind and searching for atypical causes of ACS may ‘help avoid mistakes in their treatment’ [1, 2]. On the other ha ...
Exercise and stable coronary artery disease
Exercise and stable coronary artery disease

... Exercise and stable coronary artery disease Reporter: Finco Wu Adviser: Linda Lin ...
slides
slides

... Need adequate number of patients to detect uncommon but clinically important safety events – Not all patients need to be part of a randomized trial – Can use multiple trials (both US and OUS) ...
Cardiovascular Pathology I
Cardiovascular Pathology I

... to which the large arrow is pointing. What chambers of the heart are labeled A and B? ...
Coronary Artery Disease
Coronary Artery Disease

... Risk Factors One of the Major Modifiable ...
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Drug-eluting stent



A drug-eluting stent (DES) is a peripheral or coronary stent (a scaffold) placed into narrowed, diseased peripheral or coronary arteries that slowly releases a drug to block cell proliferation. This prevents fibrosis that, together with clots (thrombi), could otherwise block the stented artery, a process called restenosis. The stent is usually placed within the peripheral or coronary artery by an interventional cardiologist or interventional radiologist during an angioplasty procedure.Drug-eluting stents in current clinical use were approved by the FDA after clinical trials showed they were statistically superior to bare-metal stents for the treatment of native coronary artery narrowings, having lower rates of major adverse cardiac events (usually defined as a composite clinical endpoint of death + myocardial infarction + repeat intervention because of restenosis). The first drug-eluting stents to be approved in Europe and the U.S. were coated with paclitaxel or an mTOR inhibitor, such as sirolimus.
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