Cor Vasa 2018, 60(5):e560-e561 | DOI: 10.1016/j.crvasa.2017.06.001

A new lesion in an old stent: A new insight into very late stent thrombosis

Kamran Majeeda,b,*, Richard Alcocka
a Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, WA 6009, Australia
b University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia

Received: May 20, 2017; Accepted: June 1, 2017; Published: October 1, 2018  Show citation

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Majeed K, Alcock R. A new lesion in an old stent: A new insight into very late stent thrombosis. Cor Vasa. 2018;60(5):e560-561. doi: 10.1016/j.crvasa.2017.06.001.
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References

  1. F. Otsuka, M. Vorpahl, M. Nakano, et al., Pathology of second-generation everolimus-eluting stents versus sirolimus- and paclitaxel-eluting stents in humans, Circulation 129 (2014) 211-223. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  2. S.-Y. Lee, S.-H. Hur, S.-G. Lee, et al., Optical coherence tomographic observation of in-stent neoatherosclerosis in lesions with more than 50% neointimal area stenosis after second-generation drug-eluting stent implantation, Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions 8 (2015) e001878. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...
  3. S.J. Park, S.J. Kang, R. Virmani, et al., In-stent neoatherosclerosis: a final common pathway of late stent failure, Journal of the American College of Cardiology 59 (2012) 2051-2057. Go to original source... Go to PubMed...




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