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Implantation of vascular mimetic implants in challenging chronic total occlusions - SuperaTM Extreme.

Erwin BlessingMuliadi AntaredjaLisa TilemannRalph Oberacker
Published in: VASA. Zeitschrift fur Gefasskrankheiten (2020)
Standard nitinol stents (SNS), with or without drug eluting technology, are an essential tool within the interventional armamentarium in the treatment of patients with peripheral arterial disease. However, they are plagued by a number of limitations: a.) stent fractures, although observed predominately in first-generation stents, do still occur in state-of-the art stent platforms, b.) lack of radial strength, resulting in inadequate stent expansion, c.) kinking up to a complete collapse of the stent, therefore compromising its use in areas of high mechanical stress such as bending zones. In contrast, the interwoven design of the SuperaTM stent, also referred to as "vascular mimetic implant", overcomes all of the above limitations of SNS. Several registries and studies not only confirmed its mechanical superiority (lack of stent fractures etc.) but also demonstrated remarkable clinical performance (patency and freedom from target lesion revascularization), despite its use in challenging lesions (calcification etc.) and territories (popliteal arteries etc.). Increasing confidence in the mechanical properties of the SuperaTM stent platform prompted interventionalists to further "push the limits" of this unique implant. The present article summarizes the clinical data and shows examples of "extreme" applications of this dedicated stent platform.
Keyphrases
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