# ‘Balloon screen’ technique: a case report of a novel bailout strategy for accurate stent deployment in severely calcified coronary lesions complicated by dissection

**Authors:** Masataka Yoshinaga, Takashi Muramatsu, Kenya Nasu, Akane Miyazaki, Eiichi Watanabe

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ehjcr/ytag118 · European Heart Journal. Case Reports · 2026-02-13

## TL;DR

A new technique called 'balloon screen' helps accurately place stents in severely calcified coronary arteries when devices keep entering a false lumen.

## Contribution

The 'balloon screen' technique is introduced as a novel bailout strategy for stent deployment in calcified coronary lesions complicated by dissection.

## Key findings

- The balloon screen technique temporarily blocks a false lumen, enabling successful stent delivery in the true lumen.
- Intravascular ultrasound confirmed excellent stent expansion after using the balloon screen method.
- The patient remained asymptomatic at 6-month follow-up after successful stent deployment.

## Abstract

Severely calcified coronary lesions may require atherectomy and imaging guidance, yet procedural dissection can create a false lumen that repeatedly captures devices, risking inadvertent false-lumen stenting.

A 77-year-old man with Canadian Cardiovascular Society class III angina had severe diffuse calcification in the left anterior descending artery (ACC/AHA type B2; SYNTAX I 22; SYNTAX II 48.7). Although anatomical complexity was moderate, the SYNTAX II score was driven by advanced age and lower extremity artery disease. After rotational atherectomy (1.5-mm burr) and high-pressure scoring balloon angioplasty, guidewire exchange was complicated by migration into a false lumen behind circumferential calcium. Although a second wire was advanced into the true lumen using a double-lumen catheter, repeated attempts to deliver a drug-eluting stent deviated into the false channel. A semi-compliant balloon was therefore advanced into the false lumen and gently inflated to temporarily block it (‘balloon screen’), enabling stent delivery over the true-lumen wire. An Onyx Frontier 3.0 × 38 mm stent was deployed, and intravascular ultrasound confirmed excellent expansion. The patient was discharged the next day and remained asymptomatic at 6-month follow-up; key steps are shown in Supplementary material online, Videos S1–S3.

The balloon screen technique provides a practical bailout when stent delivery repeatedly tracks a false lumen after dissection in heavily calcified lesions. Creating a temporary physical barrier within the false channel, it promotes accurate true-lumen stenting, but careful balloon handling is required.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** LAD lesion (MESH:D020759), III angina (MESH:D000787), calcification (MESH:D002114), rupture (MESH:D012421), dissection (MESH:D000784), fracture (MESH:D050723), coronary lesions (MESH:D003327), LEAD (MESH:D002539), calcified (MESH:D018333), CCS class III angina (MESH:D008313), coronary calcification (MESH:D003323), ACC/AHA type B2 (MESH:D004476), hypertension (MESH:D006973), ischaemic (MESH:D018917), -branch occlusion (MESH:D012170)
- **Chemicals:** luminal (MESH:D010634), creatinine (MESH:D003404), calcium (MESH:D002118), Onyx (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12959534/full.md

## References

9 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12959534/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12959534