Dissolvable Stent to Treat Peripheral Artery Disease Below the Knee with Dr. Ethan Korngold Abbott
Dr. Ethan Korngold is the chief medical officer and divisional vice president of medical affairs at Abbott’s vascular business, which has developed a dissolvable stent technology to treat peripheral artery disease. PAD disproportionately affects Black and Hispanic communities and is often overlooked because early symptoms can be mistaken for other conditions. The Esprit BTK stent can help open up the smaller arteries below the knee and improve blood flow to the legs and feet to treat PAD and prevent severe complications and amputations.
Ethan explains, "So peripheral artery disease refers to blockages in the arteries to the legs. When those blockages build up, it’s because of cholesterol typically that builds up in the walls of the artery and causes limited blood flow. Initially, people can have cramping or soreness in their legs when they walk. That gets better with rest. As the blockages get worse, people can develop infections, ulcers, or non-healing wounds of their legs with what we call chronic limb-threatening ischemia. And ultimately, that can put people at risk for amputation."
"A lot of people aren’t aware of how common it is, and a lot of people aren’t attuned to the symptoms of it. People just sort of slow down. They do less and less, and they wind up being limited in their activities, and that really affects their health and their life, and ultimately, that can threaten their limbs. One of the things that Abbott is emphatic about is spreading awareness of the disease, trying to educate patients, trying to educate families, and trying to educate physicians so that people are more on guard for looking out for the signs and symptoms of the disease."
"We have been working at Abbott for many years on techniques to help open up these blockages in the arteries of the legs. They start at about the belly button and go all the way down to the toes. At the belly button, the iliac arteries are quite large. They are about a half an inch in diameter. And then, as they go down all the way to the toes, they get narrower and narrower so that they’re about a quarter of an inch to an eighth of an inch in diameter. There are a variety of different techniques to get through those blockages, such as using catheters, and wires balloons, and stents and scaffolds to help open up those arteries and change people’s lives. One of the biggest challenges in this space has been those smaller arteries below the knee."
#Abbott #AbbottVascular #PeripheralArteryDisease #PAD #DissolvableStentTechnology
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