With medication control and emergency stents, is there hope for coronary patients?

  As people get older, the blood vessels in the heart become narrow or even blocked, and stents hold the vessels open so that blood can flow back to the heart smoothly.  The traditional view that stents help relieve angina and prevent heart attacks and brain attacks has given hope to countless coronary heart disease patients. However, a recent study at Imperial College London found that coronary stent interventions do not improve quality of life and even carry a significant risk of damaging arteries, with millions of people undergoing stenting procedures each year, with 1 in 7 men and 1 in 12 women experiencing adverse reactions, increased return rates and multiple stenting procedures.  In fact, there has been some clinical “controversy” whether to do stents or not!  Although stents can quickly open the blood circulation in a short time, but this is only a short relief, for some patients with mild disease, there is no benefit, but in the long run, stents are not only expensive, but also a foreign body relative to the human body, which is a double-edged sword, and it may still lead to the emergence of thrombosis, causing restenosis or even infarction, so long-term anticoagulation therapy should be performed after stenting. Therefore, long-term anticoagulation therapy is required after stenting, but this in turn increases the risk of bleeding in various organs.  The invisible “stent” that saves your life!  With the advancement of medicine and the gradual improvement of heart diseases, we found that the causes of coronary artery disease are still inadequate and cannot be explained by the current etiology for some special groups. This is an overall lesion, which may then increase the chance of plaque thrombosis, further affecting the myocardial blood supply and causing a series of symptoms.  With the treatment of the corresponding lesion, it is possible to make the cause of the stimulation of sympathetic nerve compression disappear, and at the same time release the excitability of the nerve through neuromodulation, so that patients with coronary artery disease can return to normal, which is not a stent, but has a better status and role, and in a sense, is the only treatment that can effectively make some patients with coronary artery disease In a sense, it is the only treatment that can effectively restore the health of some patients with coronary heart disease.