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What’s the difference between so-called drug-eluting stents and bare-metal stents?

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What’s the difference between so-called drug-eluting stents and bare-metal stents?

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A. Stents, which are metal devices that are placed inside arteries after angioplasty to help keep them open, have been used to treat coronary artery blockages for years. Drug-eluting stents are coated with a drug released over time that decreases the chances of a blockage returning. Bare-metal stents are not coated. Some reports have suggested that clots are more likely to develop inside drug-eluting stents than in bare-metal stents. However, researchers did not find a greater incidence of heart attack or death with drug-eluting stents, and the need for a repeat procedure was significantly reduced.

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