|
DEFINITION
Atherosclerosis
Atherosclerotic
plaque can build up inside arteries and block the normal flow
of blood, limiting the amount of blood that reaches body tissues.
The body's arterial system carries oxygenated blood from the
heart to the rest of the body. The aorta, the largest artery
in the body, arches upward from the top of the heart and then
descends through the middle of the torso. Smaller arteries
branch off from the aorta and distribute blood to muscles,
organs and other body tissues.
As people
age, the normal flow of blood through the arteries can be
affected by the buildup of plaque inside the arteries. The
plaque is made up of cholesterol or lipids, calcium and fibrous
tissue. This buildup of atherosclerotic plaque is more likely
to occur at sites where arteries divide and give off into
branches. These areas, called bifurcations, are subject to
greater turbulence in the flow of the blood.
Over time,
plaques continue to grow on arterial walls as cholesterol
circulates in the blood, and as the plaques enlarge the arteries
become narrow and stiffened. This process is called atherosclerosis,
commonly known as 'hardening of the arteries' because the
plaque buildup thickens the walls of the arteries, narrowing
the space through which blood flows. When this narrowing occurs
in an artery, the circulation of blood through the area of
the body that gets its blood from the artery is reduced. Poor
circulation in turn can cause ischemia, or a decrease in blood
flow that causes insufficient oxygen levels in body tissues.
TREATMENT
Angioplasty is a procedure during which doctors inflate
a small balloon inside a blood vessel to eliminate or reduce
areas of narrowing inside the blood vessel. The goal of angioplasty
is revascularization, or the restoration of an adequate flow
of blood in a part of the body. Angioplasty accomplishes this
restoration of blood flow by actually enlarging from within
a blood vessel the area through which blood may flow.
Arteries
have three layers: a thin, smooth inner layer, a muscular,
elastic middle layer and an external layer of connective tissue.
Inflating an angioplasty balloon inside an artery affected
by atherosclerotic buildup causes a kind of controlled, helpful
injury to the artery. As doctors inflate the balloon, the
smooth inner layer, which typically covers any plaque buildup
inside the artery, stretches and tears as the balloon inflates.
When the balloon continues to inflate, plaque deposits are
compressed, and any fluid in the plaque deposit is squeezed
out. The plaque may break, or fracture, and the muscular middle
layer of the artery begins to stretch. Usually, the external
layer of an artery is not stretched during angioplasty.
The compression
and break-up of plaque deposits enlarges the area inside an
artery through which blood may flow. Also, when the inner
layer of an artery is stretched and torn, the body's natural
healing process is triggered, which also helps the process
of breaking down and reducing the size of the plaque and smoothing
the internal surface of the vessel.
During
angioplasty, doctors inflate a tiny balloon inside an artery
to reduce the size of plaque buildup, expanding the diameter
inside of the blood vessel and improving blood flow.
Stents
are slender metal-mesh tubes placed inside a blood vessel
to act as scaffolding that helps keep blood vessels wide open.
BENEFITS
There are dramatic benefits to Minimally Invasive Vascular
Surgery. Surgery without major incision minimizes tissue damage
allowing for a shorter hospital stay and faster recovery time.
Patients also enjoy reduced post-operative pain and less scarring
than open surgery.
FIND
A DOCTOR
Back
to top
|