To place a stent, your doctor will make a small
opening in a blood vessel in your groin (upper thigh), arm, or neck. Through
this opening, your doctor will thread a thin, flexible tube called a catheter
with a deflated balloon on its end.
A stent may be placed around the deflated balloon.
The tip of the catheter is threaded up to the narrowed section of the artery or
to the aneurysm
or aortic tear site.
Special x-ray movies are taken of the tube as it's
threaded up into your blood vessel. These movies help your doctor position the
catheter.
For Arteries Narrowed by Plaque
Once the tube is in the area of the artery that
needs treatment:
Your doctor uses a special dye to help see
narrowed areas of the blood vessel.
Your doctor inflates the balloon. It pushes
against the plaque and compresses it against the artery wall. The fully
extended balloon also expands the surrounding stent, pushing it into place in
the artery.
The balloon is deflated and taken out along with
the catheter. The stent remains in your artery. Cells in your artery eventually
grow to cover the mesh of the stent and create an inner layer that looks like
the inside of a normal blood vessel.
Coronary Artery Stent
Placement
The illustration shows the placement
of a stent in a coronary artery with plaque buildup. Figure A shows the
deflated balloon catheter and closed stent inserted into the narrowed coronary
artery. The inset image on figure A shows a cross-section of the artery with
the inserted balloon catheter and closed stent.
In figure B, the balloon is
inflated, expanding the stent and compressing the plaque to restore the size of
the artery. Figure C shows normal blood flow restored in the stent-widened
artery. The inset image on figure C shows a cross-section of the compressed
plaque and stent-widened artery.
The animation below shows angioplasty and stent
placement. Click the "start" button to play the animation. Written and spoken
explanations are provided with each frame. Use the buttons in the lower right
corner to pause, restart, or replay the animation, or use the scroll bar below
the buttons to move through the frames.
The animation shows how a doctor
inserts a tube called a balloon catheter into a coronary artery narrowed by
plaque. The balloon catheter compresses the plaque, widens the artery, and
restores blood flow. Through the catheter, a stent is placed in the artery to
help maintain the restored blood flow.
A very narrow artery, or one that's hard to reach
with a catheter, may require more steps to place a stent. This type of artery
usually is first expanded by inflating a small balloon. The balloon is then
removed and replaced by another larger balloon with the collapsed stent around
it. At this point, your doctor can follow the standard practice of compressing
the plaque and placing the stent.
When
angioplasty
and stent placement are done on carotid arteries, a special filter device is
used. The filter helps keep blood clots and loose pieces of plaque from passing
into the bloodstream and traveling up to the brain during the procedure.
For Aortic Aneurysms
The procedure to place a stent in an artery with an
aneurysm is very similar to the one used for an artery narrowed by plaque. The
stent used to treat an aneurysm is different, though. Its made out of
pleated fabric, often with one or more tiny hooks.
Once the stent has been placed and expanded to fit
tight against the artery wall, the hooks on the stent latch on to the artery
wall. This anchors the stent.
The stent creates a new inner lining for that
portion of the artery. Cells in the artery eventually grow to cover the fabric
and create an inner layer that looks like the inside of a normal blood
vessel.