Search

HarvardScience is a publication of the Harvard Office of News and Public Affairs devoted to all matters related to science at the various schools, departments, institutes, and hospitals of Harvard University.
Harvard Science engineering + technology
This section of the digits of a developing chick shows the expression pattern of the joint-inducer Wnt14 (shown in white). Wnt14 is expressed in the joint (transverse stripes) and in the surrounding soft tissues, but not in the bone or cartilage adjacent to the joint.

Courtesy of Christine Hartmann

Radiation limits narrowing of arteries after stent

150,000 patients in U.S. per year suffer from artery narrowing after placement of stent

February 23, 2001

The results of a trial directed by the Harvard Clinical Research Institute and the Cardiovascular Data Analysis Center indicate there may be an effective alternative to placement of a stent to prevent artery narrowing after angioplasty. That alternative is intracoronary radiation therapy, or "brachytherapy." The first-of-its-kind trial tested the safety and efficacy of the delivery of iridium-192, a source of gamma radiation, in the prevention of artery narrowing. Richard Kuntz of Harvard Medical School and colleagues found that intracoronary gamma irradiation resulted in significantly less re-narrowing, and thus a significant decrease in the need for additional cardiac procedures. This study appeared in the Jan. 25, 2001, New England Journal of Medicine.

foundations environments animal, vegetable, + mineral medicine + health culture + society engineering + technology