Heart Stents
January 16, 2007
Boston Scientific’s Stent Sales Fall
Boston Scientific Corp. said fourth-quarter sales of its Taxus drug-coated stent fell nearly 12 percent from the previous quarter, but the medical device maker expects the slumping stent market to rebound from recent safety worries.
Posted by Michael Monheit at 08:22 AM | Permalink
December 15, 2006
Too Many Stents Being Used in Heart Surgery
Last year, Johnson & Johnson and Boston Scientific together sold more than one million drug-coated stents. They have become a primary treatment for the number one cause of death in the United States - heart disease. (Read More About Overuse of Heart Stents...)
Posted by Michael Monheit at 09:45 AM | Permalink
The Pen Is Mightier than the Clot
Blogger Burt Cohen pokes 10 big holes in MSNBC’s recent report on teensy walking time bombs known as stents. Rule #1 – When you’re writing to people who have weak coronary arteries you might not want to start out with, “Millions of Americans could be walking around with tiny time bombs in their hearts."… (PTCA)
Posted by Michael Monheit at 08:58 AM | Permalink
New Heart Imaging Device May Reduce Thrombosis Caused by Stents
When stents were first introduced in the mid-90s, a researcher showed that the some of the suboptimal results being seen were to a large extent due to under-expansion of the stent devices in the arteries. Intravascular Ultrasound Imaging (IVUS) may better solve the problem of viewing the stent devices in the arteries to make sure they are expanding the artery properly in order to prevent thrombosis. (Source)
Posted by Michael Monheit at 08:57 AM | Permalink
December 14, 2006
New Technology Will Reduce Stent Problems
Atlanta-based CeloNova BioSciences today in October 2006 that it has a technological solution for the serious thrombosis problems facing drug-eluting stents. The solution is the patented, medically inert Polyzene(R)-F stent coating.
Polyzene(R)-F prevents thrombosis and promotes normal endothelial cell growth. Interventional physicians will soon be able to minimize restenosis without resorting to drug-eluting stents that can cause thromboses and heart attack.
Long term studies now suggest that a small number (2-6%) of these drug-eluting stents are associated with a rare but catastrophic risk for thrombosis. Nearly 50% of patients with a drug-eluting stent thrombosis die from the effects of the blood clot. This increased risk of blood clots and deaths is apparently caused by the drugs
interference with the normal blood vessel wall healing process in which new
endothelial cells grow over the site of the stent implant as the stent is
integrated into the structure of the artery. In contrast to this interference from drugs, in animal studies and human clinical trials, Polyzene(R)-F actually promoted healthy endothelial cell growth.
And, in contrast to the clot-inducing potential of bare metal stents, the
Polyzene(R)-F coating inhibits the adhesion and activation of coagulation factors that can produce clots.
Posted by Michael Monheit at 08:58 AM | Permalink


