2013
DOI: 10.1002/ccd.24954
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Delivering stents in congenital heart disease using the double‐wire technique: Technical considerations

Abstract: The double-wire stenting technique is effective to accurately deliver and anchor stents into lesions close to side branches and bifurcations. Side branch patency is maintained; the clinical objective (gradient relief, aneurysm exclusion, relief of external compression) can safely be reached. Technique and balloon selection should be based on the underlying anatomical substrate.

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…4 A second technique involves expansion of one stent in the distal main pulmonary artery (MPA) over one or two balloons with guidewires positioned in each distal branch pulmonary artery (“double-wire” technique). 5, 6 A more recently described strategy involves expansion of one stent from the distal MPA to a proximal stenotic branch pulmonary artery thereby jailing the other branch pulmonary artery, and then subsequently dilating the jailed vessel with a balloon advanced through the struts of the stent. 7, 8 While each of these strategies may be useful, none address bilateral branch pulmonary artery stenoses while also permitting subsequent placement of a transcatheter valve.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4 A second technique involves expansion of one stent in the distal main pulmonary artery (MPA) over one or two balloons with guidewires positioned in each distal branch pulmonary artery (“double-wire” technique). 5, 6 A more recently described strategy involves expansion of one stent from the distal MPA to a proximal stenotic branch pulmonary artery thereby jailing the other branch pulmonary artery, and then subsequently dilating the jailed vessel with a balloon advanced through the struts of the stent. 7, 8 While each of these strategies may be useful, none address bilateral branch pulmonary artery stenoses while also permitting subsequent placement of a transcatheter valve.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%