Dissolvable Electronic Stent Can Monitor Blocked Arteries
ckwu writes: To restore blood flow in a narrowed or blocked artery, doctors can implant a metal stent to hold open the vessel. But over time, stents can cause inflammation and turbulent blood flow that lead to new blockages. Now, researchers have designed a stent carrying a suite of onboard electronic blood-flow and temperature sensors, drug delivery particles, data storage, and communication capabilities to detect and overcome these problems. The entire device is designed to dissolve as the artery heals. Medical device companies and cardiologists could look at this electronic stent as a kind of menu from which they can pick whatever components are most promising for treating certain kinds of cardiovascular disease, the researchers say.
My first thought is I hope the patients kidneys/liver don't have issues removing the dissolved electronic device from your blood, and the thing doesn't dislodge while still dissolving and damage a heart valve or cause some other blockage.
Just last year we were putting dissolving coronary stents in patients as a study in my lab. The researchers were highly selective about who was eligible based on a strict criteria. So I think putting electronics in them is even further off.
Chewbacon
The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
Dr. Esselstyn at the Cleveland clinic has this diet (yeah pretty much vegan) that can reverse artery disease! I know a few heart docs at Cleveland clinic and they always talked about this guy. I actually saw photos of a completely blocked artery on x ray that after weeks it slowly opened up by just changing diet. Apparently the teflon like sheath inside arteries can get damaged, his diet restored the sheath and no more blockage. So if that is possible, the only reason to create some crazy stent like this is for money.
more of what the issue is with the stents implanted in the last 10 years, like how long I got doc?
Get up!
Out of curiousity, when an artery is blocked with plague, what are the chances of it actually healing after a stent is popped in? My understanding was that the plague sticks to the wall and then the arterial wall kinda grows over it as a protection mechanism.
And who is vetting these putative medical breakthroughs? Do they know what they are doing?
This technology opens new horizons for implementing planned obsolescence in TV sets, smartphones, vacuum cleaners...
It seems exercise, in an actual trial, worked as good (or better) than a stent:
So...why would we do stents if exercise works as good or even better?
http://www.medscape.com/viewar...
Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, religion destroys spirituality
If you do the research you'd find out these breakthroughs are being conducted by, and created by some of the best medical science has to offer.
A lot of it has gone through extensive testing. One of them, the cure for color blindness is starting human trials next year.
As for regenerative medicine, it's been around for decades, but has the medical establishment embraced it as THE go to solution to many problems? NO. How do you explain that?
As for your "who is vetting these putative medical breaktroughs and do they know what they are doing questions", ask yourself this.
Daily you'll see commercials for the "greatly vetted" drugs that help with any myriad of conditions, that many times have side affects more serious then the condition they purport to help with. So much so that they have to warn the user about many that can cause "serious injury, or even death".
So lets talk about a cure for pancreatic cancer, which is a death sentence to those who are unfortunate to get it.
Hmmm!, lets see, there might be a drug that can extend my life expectancy from a few months to a few extra months, or take a chance on a cure. Umm!, no brainer, give me the supposed cure!
Wake up sheep.
There are several studies that claim un-medicated stents don't improve life expectancy. They only reduce the need for future surgeries on that particular artery. http://www.medicinenet.com/scr...
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Those are probably mostly BS or harmful too. The vetting process is nonsense. Look up NHST.