Atlas Peripheral Stent System: Design & Key Features
The Atlas Peripheral Stent System is a self-expanding nitinol stent for iliac, femoral, and popliteal PAD lesions. Explore its design features.
INVAMED BLOG
The latest insights, innovations, and perspectives from the world of medical technology.
The Atlas Peripheral Stent System is a self-expanding nitinol stent for iliac, femoral, and popliteal PAD lesions. Explore its design features.
A step-by-step walkthrough of the leg stent procedure for peripheral artery disease, from access and angioplasty to stent deployment and same-day recovery.
Atlas Endovascular Stent Graft is designed for iliac, femoral, and popliteal aneurysm repair. Explore its covered-stent design and key features.
A procurement-focused guide to peripheral arterial disease (pad) devices: INVAMED's portfolio, ing, internationally recognized quality management standards manufacturing, and what to check when…
Why diabetes and peripheral arterial disease frequently occur together, how the combination affects below-knee arteries, and why screening matters.
Critical limb ischemia is an advanced form of PAD. Learn its symptoms, causes, and the modern endovascular options physicians may consider today.
How peripheral stent sizing decisions around diameter, length, and oversizing are made to match a self-expanding device to the target vessel.
Self-expanding nitinol stent design explained: chronic outward force, laser-cut struts, and why this material suits leg arteries in PAD.
How the ankle-brachial index test works, what the resulting ratio means, and why toe pressure testing is sometimes used alongside it.
Extender Drug PTA Balloon Catheter by INVAMED: a paclitaxel-coated peripheral balloon designed to address restenosis. Explore key specifications.
How do drug-coated balloons work in PAD treatment? Learn how DCBs deliver medication to artery walls to help reduce restenosis after angioplasty.
What are the risks of atherectomy? An educational, technical answer with device context from INVAMED. Informational only — not medical advice.