Drug-eluting stents are coated with medicine to prevent a coronary
artery from narrowing again after
angioplasty.
Stents are small, wire-mesh tubes that are inserted during
angioplasty into a blocked section of the coronary artery to open the artery
and improve blood flow. See a picture of a
stent
.
Drug-eluting stents were developed to replace standard bare-metal
stents, which occasionally caused scar tissue to form and narrow the artery
again. Drug-eluting stents are coated with drugs that prevent scar tissue from
growing into the artery and thus are more effective in keeping the artery open.
In the SIRIUS and TAXUS trials, drug-eluting stents significantly
reduced the risk of reclosure of the affected artery, compared with standard
stents.1, 2 But experts do not
know yet how safe the drug-eluting stents are over the long term or how well
they work over the long term.
In the future, drug-eluting stents may even be used to reopen
sections of artery that have closed around an old stent. In a small,
preliminary trial, drug-eluting stents were found to be safe and effective in
keeping the narrowed artery open.3
Whether your doctor chooses to give you a drug-eluting stent will
depend in part on your age and any other risk factors (such as diabetes) that
make it more likely that your artery will narrow again. In some cases, a second
catheterization or coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) may be needed at
a later time. Your doctor will also consider your overall health and how well
you would be able to handle a second surgery when recommending treatment for
you.