Abstract
The number of successful case reports with percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) / stenting for intracranial atherosclerotic stenoses is recently increasing with the advent of flexible coronary stents. However, it is not well known whether the perforating artery is occluded or not after stent placement in the atherosclerotic stenotic vessels. We investigated this issue using five New Zealand white rabbits. We deployed stainless steel stents in the atherosclerosis-induced abdominal aorta across the lumbar artery in which the diameters of the abdominal arteries were similar to those of human intracranial arteries. We evaluated the patency of lumbar artery by angiography and scanning electron microscopy three months after stent placement. The lumbar arteries were patent in four out of five rabbits. However, SEM findings demonstrated stent struts were covered with thick neointima and the ostia between stent struts were partially occluded. It is possible that stent placement in the atherosclerotic arteries can cause the obliteration of the perforating arteries.
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