Hi,
I hear of anticoagulants being very important for patients who have stents, but few have them with balloon angioplasty.
Why is this?
I thought ANY surgical incision/intervention would need anticoagulants to prevent clotting?
Could someone explain please
Anticoagulants very important for Stents but Not for Balloon
- dodgeviper
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Re: Anticoagulants very important for Stents but Not for Bal
A guess from a non professional:adamt wrote:Hi,
I hear of anticoagulants being very important for patients who have stents, but few have them with balloon angioplasty.
Why is this?
I thought ANY surgical incision/intervention would need anticoagulants to prevent clotting?
Could someone explain please
The stents are metal and not native tissue. The stents are not smooth like the normal interior of veins but are stretched mesh. When the body's natural mechanisms detect something not smooth (like a foreign mesh surface) the "repair injury" response comes into play: clotting around the injured site.
When you only have ballooning no foreign material is placed into the vein and the ballooned, stenosed area is like the rest venous system: smooth and natural.
While there might be other reasons for taking anti-coagulants if one has been "only ballooned" the reason for taking them when having a stent is stronger.
Again, guesswork. So don't shoot.
Re: Anticoagulants very important for Stents but Not for Bal
My understanding, garnered only by reading 100+ pages in Dr.S's thread, is that when a vein is ballooned, it causes injury to the vein. This injury spurs an "intimal hyperplasia" response of regrowth which can lead to the vein clotting off. I think. If intimal hyperplasia and clotting are wholly separate things, then I've misunderstood it along the way. So in my opinion because it is in DrS's opinion and because he makes a good argument, with anticoagulants the benefits outweigh the risks even in ballooning-only situations. He performed just 20 or maybe 19 balloon venoplasties and experienced clotting complications in at least two that he has mentioned. In one of those, he was unable to unclot it or declot it once it was clotted, so that venous route is still not open in that patient.dodgeviper wrote:When you only have ballooning no foreign material is placed into the vein and the ballooned, stenosed area is like the rest venous system: smooth and natural.
"However, the truth in science ultimately emerges, although sometimes it takes a very long time," Arthur Silverstein, Autoimmunity: A History of the Early Struggle for Recognition
I'll try and answer this, since my wife had balloonings on both jugulars about 7 weeks ago - no stents. She was put on Plavix for a month. She had a doppler checkup after one month, and everything looked good. She is now on a daily baby aspirin, at least until her next checkup in August.adamt wrote:thanks for the replies.
So i guess i better demand anticoagulants post procedure.
How long is suitable to be taking the anticoagulants for after being liberated?
Is Heparin theb est choice anticoagulant?
Realize every case is unique, and different doctors may have different recommendations.