1 research outputs found
Factors that affect mass transport from drug eluting stents into the artery wall
Coronary artery disease can be treated by implanting a stent into the blocked region
of an artery, thus enabling blood perfusion to distal vessels. Minimally invasive procedures
of this nature often result in damage to the arterial tissue culminating in the
re-blocking of the vessel. In an effort to alleviate this phenomenon, known as restenosis,
drug eluting stents were developed. They are similar in composition to a bare
metal stent but encompass a coating with therapeutic agents designed to reduce
the overly aggressive healing response that contributes to restenosis. There are many
variables that can influence the effectiveness of these therapeutic drugs being transported
from the stent coating to and within the artery wall, many of which have
been analysed and documented by researchers. However, the physical deformation
of the artery substructure due to stent expansion, and its influence on a drugs ability
to diffuse evenly within the artery wall have been lacking in published work to date.
The paper highlights previous approaches adopted by researchers and proposes the
addition of porous artery wall deformation to increase model accuracy