angioplastiat
Angioplastiat are medical procedures aimed at restoring blood flow in narrowed or blocked arteries by widening the vessel lumen. The most common form is balloon angioplasty, where a catheter with a small balloon is guided to the site of narrowing and inflated to compress plaque against the artery wall. Often a stent is placed to keep the artery open. Drug-eluting stents release medication to reduce restenosis. Other devices include atherectomy systems that remove plaque and specialized balloons or lithotripsy for heavily calcified vessels.
Indications include coronary artery disease with limiting chest pain or after a heart attack, peripheral arterial
During the procedure, anticoagulation is used, and after stent placement antiplatelet therapy is usually required for
Risks include restenosis or re-narrowing, vessel injury or rupture, blood clots, embolization, contrast-related kidney effects, infection,
History notes that balloon angioplasty was developed in the late 1970s by Andreas Gruentzig and has since