Korean Circ J.  1998 Jun;28(6):894-901. 10.4070/kcj.1998.28.6.894.

Initial and Follow-up Results of Freedom (TM) Stent

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Wonkwang, Iksan, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
The Freedom (TM) stent, which is one of recently developed balloon-expandable coil stents, has advantages of low profile and good trackability and flexibility. We evaluated the initial results and the late restenosis rate of Freedom (TM) stent in patients with coronary artery disease. METHOD: A total of 40 Freedom stents were implanted in 32 consecutive patients (38 lesions). The clinical diagnosis of the subjects were stable angina in 1 patient, unstable angina in 19, and acute myocardial infarction in 12. The indications of stenting were primary stenting in 11 stents, suboptimal result after PTCA in 26, and bailout procedure in 1. A mean diameter of reference artery was 3.1 mm (SD, +/-0.4) and mean of lesion length was 10.9 mm (SD, +/-5.6). Stents were implanted with a mean maximal balloon pressure of 12.1 atm (SD, +/-2.2). Follow-up angiography was done at least 3 months (mean duration, 8.7+/-3.7) after stenting for 28 lesions of 22 patients.
RESULTS
All 40 stents were implanted safely except one, which was complicated with side branch occlusion. There was no case of stent thrombosis and clinical success rate was 97% (31/32). Minimal luminal diameter (MLD) was increased from 0.7 (SD, +/-0.4) to 3.0 mm (SD, +/-0.4) and % of diameter stenosis (%DS) was decreased from 78 (SD, +/-13) to 2% (SD, +/-5) immediately after stenting. The overall restenosis rate was 28% (8/28). The restenosis rate was increased in the complex lesions (complex, 38% vs simple, 0%: p=0.05) and lesion of small vessel (<3.0 mm, 50% vs > or = 3.0 mm, 20%:p=0.11).
CONCLUSION
FreedomTM stent is safe and feasible in patients with various morphology of coronary lesions including small and tortuous arteries, and in lesion associated with side branches. But lesions of small vessel and complex morphology are tend to be associated with higher rates of restenosis.

Keyword

Coronary stenting; Freedom stent; Restenosis

MeSH Terms

Angina, Stable
Angina, Unstable
Angiography
Arteries
Constriction, Pathologic
Coronary Artery Disease
Diagnosis
Follow-Up Studies*
Freedom*
Humans
Myocardial Infarction
Phenobarbital
Pliability
Stents*
Thrombosis
Phenobarbital
Full Text Links
  • KCJ
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr