Tomita Hideshi, Yazaki Satoshi, Echigo Shigeyuki, Kimura Kohji, Takamuro Motoki, Horita Norihisa, Fuse Shigeto, Tsutsumi Hiroyuki
Department of Pediatrics, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan.
Catheter Cardiovasc Interv. 2005 Jun;65(2):301-5. doi: 10.1002/ccd.20374.
The objective of this study was to report late distortion of a Palmaz stent. Late distortion of an original Palmaz stent, implanted in an extracardiac lesion, is rare. We completed a 1-year follow-up of 54 patients who had been implanted with 80 Palmaz stents in extracardiac lesions. Distortion of two stents was detected in two patients. For case 1, we implanted a P188 stent for supravalvar pulmonary stenosis complicating an arterial switch operation in a 14-year-old girl. Seven months later, we found compression of the stent. Although we implanted two P308 stents anterior to the distorted stent, distortion of both stents developed after 1 month. Two more P308 stents placed inside each stent were gradually recompressed. A CAT scan showed compression of the stent by a dilated sinus of valsalva. For case 2, we implanted a P308 stent for stenosis of the superior vena cava after Williams operation in an 11-year-old boy. A chest X-ray documented longitudinal compression of the stent 27 months after implantation and a CAT scan showed the ascending aorta was in contact with the stent. A Palmaz stent may be distorted when implanted in a lesion adjacent to a pulsating aorta.