Stent
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
In medicine, a stent is a small tube. It is made from special metal alloy or a bendable material called a polymer. Doctors put it inside a narrow or blocked blood vessel or duct. This keeps the passage open so blood or other fluids can flow properly.
Stenting is when a stent is placed in the body. It is often used when diseases, like atherosclerosis, make an artery too narrow. Unlike a shunt, which connects two parts of the body that were not connected before, a stent just keeps an existing passage open.
There are many types of stents for different uses. Coronary stents are used in the heart during coronary angioplasty. Drug-eluting stents are also very common. Other stents help with problems in the kidneys, brain blood vessels, and even the tubes that carry urine. Some stents are used to treat cancer or help with digestion problems.
The idea of using a stent started with Charles Stent, an English dentist, in the 1800s. Using stents in the heart began in 1986. Doctors Jacques Puel and Ulrich Sigwart used them to stop blood vessels from closing during heart procedures. Today, stents are checked carefully before being used in patients. This makes sure they are safe and work well.
Stent types
By destination organ
Main article: Coronary stent
Coronary stents are small tubes put in the heart’s blood vessels to keep them open. They are often used during a procedure called coronary angioplasty. Most of these stents release medicine to stop the arteries from narrowing again. This helps reduce chest pain and can improve health after a heart attack.
Vascular stent
Vascular stents are used to treat narrow or blocked blood vessels in parts of the body like the neck, pelvis, and legs. They are made from flexible materials to fit well inside blood vessels. These stents help keep blood flowing freely and are used to treat conditions like strokes and heart attacks.
Main article: Ureteric stent
Ureteral stents are small tubes placed in the tubes that carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder. They are used when a kidney stone blocks the flow of urine. These stents keep the passage open until the stone can be removed.
Main article: Prostatic stent
Prostatic stents are placed to help men urinate more easily when their prostate gland is enlarged. They can be temporary or permanent. Temporary stents are easier to remove, while permanent ones stay in place to keep the urinary passage open.
Colon and Esophageal stents
Main article: Esophageal stent
Colon and esophageal stents are used to help people with advanced cancer in the colon or esophagus. They keep these passages open so food and waste can pass through more easily.
Pancreatic and biliary stents
Pancreatic and biliary stents help drain fluids from the gallbladder, pancreas, and bile ducts into the small intestine. They are used when gallstones or other blockages are present.
Glaucoma drainage stent
Glaucoma drainage stents are used to help drain fluid from the eye to reduce pressure inside the eye.
By properties or function
Main article: Bare-metal stent
A bare-metal stent is a simple metal tube used to keep blood vessels open. Some of these stents have a fabric coating and are used in special surgeries.
Main article: Bioresorbable stent
A bioresorbable stent is made from material that dissolves over time. It is used to open clogged arteries and then is absorbed by the body, allowing the artery to return to its natural state.
Main article: Drug-eluting stent
Drug-eluting stents are small tubes placed in narrowed blood vessels that slowly release medicine to stop the vessels from narrowing again. They are commonly used to treat heart disease and have helped many patients live better lives.
Etymology
The word stent comes from Charles Thomas Stent, an English dentist. He lived from 1807 to 1885. Stent improved a material called gutta-percha. This material helped make better dental impressions.
Later, a Dutch doctor named Jan F. Esser used the name for a material that supports facial tissues during surgery. Over time, the idea of using a stent grew to include holding open blood vessels and other body passages.
History
The first use of a coronary stent happened in 1986. Doctors Jacques Puel and Ulrich Sigwart placed a stent in a patient in Toulouse, France. The stent worked like a small scaffold. It helped keep a blood vessel open and stop a problem called restenosis. This is when scar tissue can grow inside the stent and block blood flow.
In 1993, the first stent approved by the FDA in the United States was made by doctors Cesare Gianturco and Gary Roubin. In 2003, a new type called the drug-eluting stent was created. This new stent helped reduce restenosis even more. Work and studies on stents still continue today.
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Stent, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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