Interventional Cardiology Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Interventional Cardiology stocks.

Interventional Cardiology Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 20 BSX Philips' (PHG) Reports Positive AI-Powered Cardiac Study Data
May 20 BSX Boston Scientific (BSX) Reaches 52-Week High: What's Aiding It?
May 20 BSX Boston Scientific (BSX) mCRM System Study Outcome Favorable
May 20 BSX Pulsed field ablation poised for fast adoption, analysts say
May 20 BSX Boston Scientific hits all endpoints in CRM trial
May 20 BSX UK backs use of cancer treatment offered by Boston Scientific
May 20 BSX J&J posts latest Varipulse data while awaiting FDA review
May 18 BSX Boston Scientific succeeds in pivotal trial for leadless pacemaker
May 18 BSX MODULAR ATP Study of the mCRMâ„¢ System Meets Primary Safety and Efficacy Endpoints
May 17 BSX Veeva's (VEEV) Vault Basics to Boost Efficiency for Biotechs
May 17 BSX AxoGen (AXGN) Initiates BLA Submission for Avance Nerve Graft
May 17 AVGR Are Medical Stocks Lagging Avinger (AVGR) This Year?
May 17 BSX Jim Cramer Recommends Buying This Sports Betting Company's Stock: 'I Think It's Terrific'
May 17 SWAV Elixir’s focal stress system to treat calcified lesions hits success in trial
May 16 AVGR Avinger Announces Conversion of $11 Million of CRG Debt into Preferred Equity
May 16 BSX HealthEquity (HQY) Closes Conduent's BenefitWallet Acquisition
May 16 AVGR Avinger Inc (AVGR) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript Highlights: Strategic Partnerships and ...
May 16 BSX NICE recommends targeted radiation therapy for liver tumours
May 16 SWAV Shockwave Medical: A Look Into Q1 Financials And Value To Johnson & Johnson Investors
May 16 BSX Boston Scientific on the importance of positive company culture at Cork facility
Interventional Cardiology

Interventional cardiology is a branch of cardiology that deals specifically with the catheter based treatment of structural heart diseases. Andreas Gruentzig is considered the father of interventional cardiology after the development of angioplasty by interventional radiologist Charles Dotter.A large number of procedures can be performed on the heart by catheterization. This most commonly involves the insertion of a sheath into the femoral artery (but, in practice, any large peripheral artery or vein) and cannulating the heart under X-ray visualization (most commonly fluoroscopy). The radial artery may also be used for cannulation; this approach offers several advantages, including the accessibility of the artery in most patients, the easy control of bleeding even in anticoagulated patients, the enhancement of comfort because patients are capable of sitting up and walking immediately following the procedure, and the near absence of clinically significant sequelae in patients with a normal Allen test. Downsides to this approach include spasm of the artery and pain, inability to use larger catheters needed in some procedures, and more radiation exposure.
The main advantages of using the interventional cardiology or radiology approach are the avoidance of the scars and pain, and long post-operative recovery. Additionally, interventional cardiology procedure of primary angioplasty is now the gold standard of care for an acute myocardial infarction. It involves the extraction of clots from occluded coronary arteries and deployment of stents and balloons through a small hole made in a major artery, which has given it the name "pin-hole surgery" (as opposed to "key-hole surgery").

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