| 04 Mai 2012
  Journal of Endovascular Therapy – A  new balloon catheter system could advance the endovascular approach to  treating obstructed arteries in the leg, offering an alternative to  surgical revascularization. Peripheral artery disease affects about 12  to 14 percent of the general population, and revascularization can be  achieved through bypass surgery or a number of minimally invasive  endovascular techniques that seek to reduce or eliminate symptoms of  reduced blood flow by improving tissue perfusion. Chronic total  occlusions of the superficial femoral artery and popliteal artery, some  of the most difficult lesions to recanalize with conventional guidewire  techniques, were treated with this new system. This first-in-man experience of the ENABLER-P Balloon Catheter System is reported in the current issue of the Journal of Endovascular Therapy. The ENABLER-P Balloon Catheter System features a unique  balloon-anchoring mechanism and an automated balloon inflation device  that allows steady, controlled guidewire advancement by the operator  through an occlusion. The new system incorporates increased top force  and better pushability of a standard guidewire.  Thirty-seven  patients with a variety of occlusions, including heavily calcified,  long, and fibrotic lesions, participated in the study. A successful  procedure was achieved in 86 percent. The average time to successfully  navigate the occlusion was 5.3 minutes. Physicians participating in the  study reported success in maintaining positioning of the guidewire in  the lumen of the blood vessel, even in curvilinear and other challenging  areas. The authors of a commentary about  this article welcome this test of new endovascular techniques and  tools. Although an increasing number of facilities favor first trying an  endovascular approach to obstructed arteries in the leg, there is a  lack of adequately designed clinical studies helping to establish these  techniques. The authors note that this new system may offer new  possibilities and change attitudes toward lower limb revascularization  in the setting of critical limb ischemia.  Full text of the article, “Recanalization of Femoropopliteal Chronic Total Occlusions Using the ENABLER-P Balloon Catheter System,” and commentary, “The ENABLER-P Balloon Catheter System: A New and Exciting Tool for Recanalization of Femoropopliteal CTOs,” Journal of Endovascular Therapy, Vol. 19, No. 2, 2012, are available at http://www.jevtonline.org/toc/enth/19/2.    About the Journal of Endovascular Therapy The Journal of Endovascular Therapy, an official publication of the International Society of Endovascular  Specialists, publishes peer-reviewed articles of interest to clinicians  and researchers in the field of endovascular interventions. The Journal’s scope is multidisciplinary, representing all topics related to  minimally invasive peripheral vascular diagnosis and treatment. Original  clinical studies, experimental investigations, state-of-the-art  reviews, rapid communications, case reports, technical notes,  editorials, and letters to the editor are published, as well as feature  articles on the basics of endovascular interventions. The journal is  available online at www.jevtonline.org. To learn more about the society, please visit www.isesonline.org.