Calcified coronary lesions have been one of the more difficult types of lesion for interventional treatment, and angioplasty is required to break the calcification before stent implantation so that the stent can expand smoothly, however, it remains unclear which type of angioplasty is optimal for different calcified lesions. In this study, a finite element approach was used to model normal balloons, cutting balloons, and AngioSculpt balloons. In addition, calcified lesions of different degrees, thicknesses, and lengths were modeled according to Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) calcification grade. The above three balloons were used to pretreat calcified lesions, and the brittle fracture module for calcification was used to detect fracture success, to facilitate virtual stent implantation after predilation. The simulation results showed that with a thickness of less than 0.3 mm, balloons were unable to deal with calcified plaques in lesions of less than 120°, for 180° calcified lesions the cutting balloon fractured the calcified material at 1.2 MPa, the AngioSculpt balloon produced multiple fractures at 0.8 MPa for 270° calcified plaques, but was unable to fracture calcified lesions with a thickness of 0.4 mm. Based on these results, we conclude that the length of the lesion did not affect calcification fracture, while the thickness of the lesion did. In calcified lesions of approximately 180°, the cutting balloon showed the best predilation results, while the AngioSculpt balloon was optimal for 270°. In annular calcification, all three balloons were unable to fracture the lesion.
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