Talk:Stent
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Evidence for the etymology being wrong? Alternative correct etymology?
- This is no longer a relevant question - the etymology is described in the now-referenced article. Yoshm 22:34, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
This should become a disambig. There are notable people named Stent: Gunther Stent and Charles Iversen Stent, to name just two.--Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus Talk 23:31, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] Image needed
This article would benefit greatly from an image (ideally of both (i) a stent and (ii) a graphic showing either a stent in an artery or the installation of a stent in an artery).Hu Gadarn 18:42, 26 May 2006 (UTC)
- Scientific American had 3 in their latest issue. Would we be allowed to use those? Supermariorobot 00:23, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] I can't add images
Where is the Stent image ????
God Wiki is impossibly hard to add a damn photo.
[edit] Personal experience (moved from article)
(This signed "personal experience" section written by tikboy has been moved from the main article to here.) Loganberry (Talk) 14:47, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
Personal Experience
The stent is inserted as it states above, via a non-invasive procedure. There is pain involved but to a minimal degree. The patient can request sedation. At the start of the procedure there is an small incision made in the groin area. This is comparable to the anesthetic needle used by a dentist. Thereafter there is almost no sensation of pain or that there is anything being inserted into the body. Depending on the patient, the cardiologist might ask the patient to aid him in getting past the diaphram by exhaling. Once this is accomplished, he continues the procedure to reach the heart arteries.
As it states above, this is from personal experience. There were only two times I experienced pain. The first was during catheterization in which a black die is injected to permit an X-ray image to be made of the arteries to locate the blockages. This black dye can cause the heart to pound extremely hard and each beat is very painful. I was told this pounding is caused by a momentary blocking of oxygen to the heart. The pounding and the pain only last for a few seconds.
The second was during the angioplasty and stent insertion. This was when the surgical assistant was instructed to increase the dosage of Nitro Glycerine to cause a very blocked artery to open to enable the cardiologist to insert a stent. The side effect of the Nitro Glycerin is a headache. These were the worst two pains I experienced during two procedures.
After the procedure is probably the worst pain of the whole procedure. Having to lie perfectly still when the human impulse is to move on occasion is difficult, especially if the person is accustomed to being physically active. This requirement is for 6 hours. The patient needs family or a very kind nurse to aid in eating and in bodily functions. The bed I was given tilted in every way imagineable so that was a relief and a help to eat.
After discharge one will find that they are somewhat weak and get out of breath easily. I also suffer depression and the depression was exascerbated by the procedures and my own thoughts of morbidity. I strongly suggest one move carefully, exercise very gently daily and radically follow a diet. My exercise regimen consisted of one city block daily for one month, done slowly. Following that and your physicians advice, increase beyond that in a series of structured steps. This again, is difficult especially for someone who may have previously been physically active. Patience in this case is a virtue and whatever else you may do- definitely keep active.
The drugs-Isosorbate Mononitrate. If you are susceptable to headaches, this drug is deadly. to be continued S. M.tikboy 15:31, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] History of stents and more images please
If someone could write a history about the discovery/invention of stents that would be great, as well would be some more photos of stents prior to insertion, like just laying on a table, and some more inserted into vessels, etc.