Cardiology's 10  Greatest Discoveries of the 20th Century
.... but still.. nothing compare to Coronary Surgery.. 
Division of Cardiology, Creighton University School of  Medicine, Omaha, Nebraska 68131
Abstract
We present a brief summary of  the 10 greatest cardiologic developments and discoveries of the 20th  century. Described are electrocardiography; preventive cardiology and  the Framingham Study; “lipid hypotheses” and atherosclerosis; coronary  care units; echocardiography; thrombolytic therapy; cardiac  catheterization and coronary angiography; open-heart surgery; automatic  implantable cardiac defibrillators; and coronary angioplasty. These  topics are the personal choices of the authors. (Tex Heart Inst J  2002;29:164–71)
Key  words: Angioplasty, balloon; angioplasty,  transluminal, percutaneous coronary; atherosclerosis; cardiology;  cardiovascular diseases/epidemiology; coronary angiography; coronary  artery bypass grafting; coronary care units; echocardiography;  electrocardiography; equipment design; heart catheterization; heart-lung  machine; history of medicine, 20th cent.;  hypercholesterolemia/prevention & control; myocardial  infarction/therapy; open-heart surgery; pacemaker; risk factors;  thrombolytic therapy
The great success in lowering cardiovascular  mortality rates during the last decades of the 20th century are  secondary to the extraordinary strides made in the understanding of  basic cardiovascular science and in the development of new diagnostic  and therapeutic techniques. We describe the 10 most important  cardiologic developments and discoveries of the last century. Without  these, the cardiology that we practice today would not be possible. The  10 topics were selected on the basis of personal choice.
1.  Electrocardiography
During  the latter part of 19th century, much research centered around the  electrical activity of the heart, although some of the 1st investigators  were unaware of the clinical usefulness of recording cardiac electrical  activity. As late as 1911, Augustus Waller, who was the pioneer of  electrocardiography, said, “I do not imagine that electrocardiography is  likely to find any very extensive use in the hospital. It can at most  be of rare and occasional use to afford a record of some rare anomaly of  cardiac action.” 1 However, just  13 years later, the Nobel Prize in Medicine was awarded to Willem  Einthoven, who transformed this curious physiologic phenomenon into an  indispensable clinical recording device.
Rudolf von Koelliker and Heinrich Müller were the  first to discover, in 1856, that the heart generated electricity. 2 The 1st  successful recording of electrical rhythm in the human heart seems to  have been made by Alexander Muirhead in 1869–70, using a Thomson siphon  recorder at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London. This equipment was  originally devised to record signals passing through the transatlantic  cable, which had been laid in 1866. 3  Waller performed his work in the development of electrocardiography at  St. Mary's Hospital, Paddington, London. He used the Lipmann capillary  electrometer to record electrical reactions of the human heart. In 1887,  Waller published the 1st report of a recording of cardiac electricity  on the body's surface; he called the recording a “cardiograph.” 4  Waller presented his paper titled “A preliminary survey of 2,000  electrocardiograms” before the Physiological Society of London in 1917. 5 Among his  contributions were the variability of the electrogram, the dipole  concept that led to isopotential mapping, and the vector concept.
Einthoven, born in 1860 in Java, Dutch East  Indies (now Indonesia), attended the University of Ütrecht Medical  School. 2 In 1887,  Einthoven was present at the International Congress of Physiology in  London, where he observed Waller demonstrating the use of the capillary  electrometer to record an “electrograph” of the heart. 6  Einthoven began to explore the use of the capillary electrometer to  record minute electrical currents. In 1895, he was able to detect  recognizable waves, which he labeled “P, Q, R, S, and T.” The  limitations of capillary electrometers led Einthoven to devise a string  galvanometer to record cardiac electrical activity. 2,3,6,7  With his new technique, he standardized the tracings and formulated the  concept of “Einthoven's triangle” by mathematically relating the 3  leads (Lead III = Lead II – Lead I). He described bigeminy,  complete heart block, “P mitrale,” right and left and ventricular  hypertrophy, atrial fibrillation and flutter, the U wave, and examples  of various heart diseases. 2,6,7  Johannes Bosscha, one of Einthoven's teachers, suggested using existing  telephone lines to link the hospital to Einthoven's physiology  laboratory. This idea increased the clinical availability of Einthoven's  instrument by enabling electrocardiographic studies to be made in  hospitalized patients. 8
Within 10 years of Einthoven's  clinical studies with the string galvanometer, the potential of  electrocardiography was realized. Many arrhythmias were recognized, and  the associations of T-wave inversion with angina and arteriosclerosis  were identified in 1910. The “father of electrocardiography” was honored  with the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1924. His important contributions  laid the foundation for the great discoveries of the 20th century and  further advances in the field of cardiology.
2.  Preventive Cardiology and the Framingham Study
The Framingham Study is one of the most  impressive medical works in the 20th century. 9 During the 1st  half of the century, there was a steady increase in deaths attributed  to heart disease. However, the causes of coronary heart disease were  speculative. Investigations comprised descriptive case reports and  case-control comparisons of small studies only. 10  With support from the newly created National Heart Institute (now  National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [NHLBI]), the 1st collection  of information from a community cohort was gathered. Between 1948 and  1951, 1,980 men and 2,421 women were enrolled in an observational study  in Framingham, Massachusetts. The 1st report of this long-term study,  “Factors of risk in the development of coronary heart disease—six-year  follow-up experience; the Framingham Study,” was published in the Annals  of Internal Medicine in 1961. 11  The study showed that high blood pressure, smoking, and high  cholesterol levels were major factors in heart disease. From this  report, the concept of risk factors emerged, and, with further  elaboration through the years, the study provided health professionals  with multifactorial risk profiles for cardiovascular disease. These  profiles assisted in the identification of candidates who might benefit  from preventive measures. The Framingham Study provided information  crucial to the recognition and management of atherosclerosis, its  causes, and its complications. Fifty years' worth of data collected from  the residents of Framingham has produced over 1,000 scientific papers;  introduced the concepts of biologic, environmental, and behavioral risk  factors; identified major risk factors associated with heart disease,  stroke, and other diseases; created a revolution in preventive medicine;  and forever changed the ways in which the medical community and the  general population view the genesis of disease. Of note, the Framingham  Study was the 1st major cardiovascular study that included women  participants. Not only was the Framingham Study a milestone in the  history of cardiology, but it has served as the model for many other  longitudinal cohort studies. We remain indebted to those who initiated  the study and thus became pioneers in preventive cardiology.
3.  “Lipid Hypotheses” and Atherosclerosis
During the 19th century, arteriosclerosis was well  recognized, but its etiologic and pathologic significance had not been  established. The hypotheses explaining it ranged from disturbed arterial  metabolism to adherent blood clots that gradually changed into  arteriosclerotic plaques. In 1904, Felix Marchand introduced the term  atherosclerosis and suggested that atherosclerosis was responsible for  nearly all obstructive processes in the arteries. 12
In St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1908, A.I.  Ignatowski observed a possible relation between cholesterol-rich foods  and experimental atherosclerosis. 13 Another sign  that cholesterol might be involved in the pathogenesis of  atherosclerosis came 2 years later, when Adolf Windaus showed that  atheromatous lesions contained 6 times as much free cholesterol as a  normal arterial wall and 20 times more esterified cholesterol. 14 Using  cholesterol-fed rabbits to produce experimental atherosclerosis, Nikolai  Anichkov demonstrated, in 1913, that it was cholesterol alone that  caused these atherosclerotic changes in the rabbit initima. 15 He found  early lesions, such as fatty streaks, as well as advanced lesions; by  standardizing cholesterol feeding, he discovered that the amount of  cholesterol uptake was directly proportional to the degree of  atherosclerosis severity. William Dock, in an editorial in 1958, likened  the significance of this classic work by Anichkov to that of the  discovery of the tubercle bacillus by Robert Koch. 16
During the 1930s, studies of the blood  concentration of cholesterol began, but most of the medical community  did not comprehend the clinical importance of such studies. In 1950,  John Gofman and his associates identified the low-density lipoprotein  (LDL) cholesterol and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol using  the ultracentrifuge technique. 17  In addition, they found that 101 of 104 men with myocardial infarction  had elevated LDL molecules—a finding which they had also observed in  their cholesterol-fed atherosclerotic rabbits. Gofman's group observed  an inverse relationship between HDLs and risk of coronary artery  disease. In 1952, Laurence Kinsell and coworkers found that ingestion of  plant foods and avoidance of animal fats decreased the blood level of  cholesterol. 18 The most  important study to identify blood cholesterol level as a risk factor for  coronary artery disease was the Framingham Study, which showed that the  risk of developing clinically significant coronary artery disease was a  continuous curvilinear function of blood cholesterol levels.
During the 1950s and 1960s, many  cholesterol-lowering agents were introduced into clinical use, including  nicotinic acid, cholestyramine, clofibrate, and plant sterols. In 1961,  the American Heart Association began encouraging people to follow a  “prudent diet;” 19  and in 1964, Konrad Bloch and Feodor Lynen received the Nobel Prize in  Medicine for their work on the metabolism of cholesterol and fatty  acids. During the 1970s, Michael Brown and Joseph Goldstein found the  LDL receptor and the LDL pathway and shared the 1985 Nobel Prize in  Medicine. Another major breakthrough in the pharmacologic management of  hypercholesterolemia was the discovery of the statins  (3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase inhibitors). Akira Endo  in Japan discovered the earliest statin, compactin, in 1976. 20  In 1985, the NHLBI established the National Cholesterol Education  Program to educate both physicians and patients about the importance of  treating hypercholesterolemia, and the 1st guidelines were published in  1988. 21 The more  that the beneficial effects of lipid-lowering interventions became  manifest via large clinical and angiographic trials, the more such  interventions were used in clinical practices for the primary and  secondary prevention of coronary artery disease.
4.  Coronary Care Units
In the  early 1960s, the technique of closed-chest cardiopulmonary  resuscitation and continuous telemetry monitoring with an alarm system  laid the groundwork for coronary care units (CCUs)—specialized intensive  care units for patients with acute myocardial infarctions (AMIs). These  developments were combined with 2 simple strategies: 1) the clustering  of patients with AMIs on a single hospital unit, where necessary  equipment and drugs were readily available and where trained personnel  could be in continuous attendance; and 2) the training of specialized  nurses to recognize and treat arrhythmias rapidly in the absence of a  physician. 22  The major objective was to reduce the number of deaths caused by  arrhythmias. However, no measures were available to manage overwhelming  shock or refractory pulmonary edema resulting from pump failure. Desmond  Julian presented the 1st description of the CCU to the British Thoracic  Society in July 1961. 23  The next year, Gaston Bauer and Malcolm White started a CCU in a Sydney  hospital. Around the same time, K.W.G. Brown in Toronto, Hughes Day in  Kansas, and Lawrence Meltzer in Philadelphia began monitoring patients  with myocardial infarctions in CCUs. 23  The importance of the specialized care administered in the CCU was  realized in 1967 when Thomas Killip and John Kimball published their  experience consisting of 250 patients with AMIs who had been treated in  the CCU. Compared with other patients who had experienced AMIs, those  treated in the CCU had better survival rates in the absence of  cardiogenic shock. 24  Other centers reported similar results. 25–27
From experience gained in the early CCUs,  it soon became apparent that arrhythmias were much more common than had  previously been suspected. Ventricular extrasystoles were found to be  almost universal and generated a lot of interest as “warning”  arrhythmias. Bernard Lown and colleagues reported that they found no  occurrence of ventricular fibrillation when patients who experienced  warning arrhythmias were treated with lidocaine. 27  The development of CCUs coincided with a rapid expansion in the use of  transvenous pacing, which was performed in 35% of patients with AMIs at  the New York Hospital–Cornell Medical Center in 1967. 25
Early success in CCUs with  resuscitation and with the detection and treatment of arrhythmias  focused researchers' attention on left ventricular failure and  cardiogenic shock. The Myocardial Infarction Research Units were created  in the United States by the NHLBI, and a large program of research was  initiated for the investigation of the hemodynamic effects of myocardial  infarction. The Swan-Ganz flow-guided catheter was introduced, and its  use for invasive monitoring of cardiac hemodynamics became routine in  some centers. 23
5.  Echocardiography
The  evolution of ultrasonography dates back to 1880, when Pierre and Jacques  Curie discovered piezoelectricity. 28 During World  War II, the field of sonar ultrasonography advanced rapidly because of  its use for detecting submarines. The pioneers of echocardiography were  Inge Edler, a cardiologist at Lund University in Sweden, and Hellmuth  Hertz, a Swedish physicist. 29 Edler and  Hertz borrowed a sonar device from a local shipyard, improved it, and  recorded cardiac echoes from Hertz's own heart. With the development of  this ultrasonic “reflectoscope,” the new field of echocardiography  emerged. Edler and Hertz first reported the continuous recording of  movements of the heart walls in 1954 and described the use of the  ultrasonic cardiogram for mitral valve diseases in 1956. 30 Edler  identified several structures on the echocardiogram and made a film that  was shown at the European Congress of Cardiology in 1960. With the  development of Doppler echocardiography in the 1960s, the ink-jet  printer (another invention by Hertz) was useful in the development of  the color Doppler technique. In 1977, Edler and Hertz were joint  recipients of the Lasker Prize, which is the American equivalent of the  Nobel Prize in Medicine.
In  Germany, Sven Effert and his colleagues identified left atrial masses  using cardiac ultrasound in 1959. 31 Effert's  team visited the United States in the early 1960s, where they met Claude  Joyner and discussed the potential of ultrasonography, including the  advantages of its nonhazardous nature. At the University of Minnesota,  John Reid, an electrical engineer, with John Wild, worked on tissue  characterization using ultrasound and developed the 1st clinical  ultrasonic scanner. Later, Reid became a member of Joyner's group in  Philadelphia where, in 1963, they published the 1st American article on  echocardiography. 32  The American achievements in early clinical echocardiography are  credited to Harvey Feigenbaum, who led research in the new field of  cardiac ultrasonography. In 1968, in Indianapolis, he started the 1st  academic course dedicated solely to cardiac ultrasonography, and in  1972, he wrote the 1st book on echocardiography. 33  As this subspecialty gained acceptance and applicability, newer  techniques—such as 2-dimensional, transesophageal, and Doppler  echocardiography—were introduced.
6. Thrombolytic Therapy
One of the last century's most  exciting developments in the field of cardiology was the introduction of  thrombolytic therapy for use in patients experiencing AMIs. In 1933,  William Tillet and R.L. Garner discovered that Group A β-hemolytic  streptococci produced a fibrinolytic substance, which they called  streptococcal fibrinolysin. 34 Haskell  Milstone, in 1941, suggested that a plasma factor, which he called a  “plasma lysing factor,” was necessary for streptococcal-mediated  fibrinolysis. 35 L. Royal  Christensen, a microbiologist, was able to describe the entire mechanism  of streptococcal fibrinolysis in 1945. He showed that human plasma  contained the precursor of an enzyme system, which he called  plasminogen, and that the streptococcal fibrinolysin, which he named  streptokinase, was an activator that could convert plasminogen to the  proteolytic and fibrinolytic enzyme plasmin. 36,37 Two  years later, Christensen made available to Tillet a crudely purified  preparation of streptokinase. Sol Sherry, Alan Johnson, and George  Hazlehurst soon joined Tillet in performing animal experiments with  streptokinase in order to determine its efficacy in the treatment of  acute coronary thrombosis. 38  In 1952, Tillet and Johnson reported lysis of experimental thrombi in  rabbits' ears with intravenous streptokinase administered through a  peripheral vein. 39  Five years later, Sherry's group reported a rational approach to  thrombolysis using a loading dose and a sustaining infusion of  streptokinase sufficient to increase the clot-dissolving activity of  plasma by several hundred-fold and to maintain a plasma streptokinase  concentration of about 10 μ/mL. 40
The 1st study of intravenously  administered streptokinase was performed in patients who had AMIs in  1958. 41  The importance of thrombolysis in such patients was highlighted when  Marcus DeWood provided angiographic evidence of a very high incidence of  total occlusion of infarct-related arteries during the early period of  infarction, 42  and Peter Rentrop and his group demonstrated rapid recanalization after  local administration of streptokinase directly into an infarct-related  artery. 43  Thereafter, the Netherlands trial, the Western Washington trials, and  ISIS-2 demonstrated both short- and long-term benefits of thrombolytic  therapy. 44–46
7.  Cardiac Catheterization and Coronary Angiography
In 1844, Claude Bernard, a noted French  research physiologist, used catheters to record intracardiac pressures  in animals and coined the term “cardiac catheterization.” 47  With the discovery of x-rays in 1895 by Wilhelm Roentgen, a new  approach to the study of cardiac anatomy became possible. 48 Two 2 German  physicians, Friedrich Jamin and Hermann Merkel, published the 1st  roentgenographic atlas of the human coronary arteries in 1907. In this  publication, the authors presented their study of 29 hearts in which the  coronary arteries were injected with a suspension of red lead in  gelatin. 49 In 1929, a  young surgical resident, Werner Forssmann, performed the 1st documented  human cardiac catheterization on himself in Eberswald, Germany. He  anesthetized his left elbow, inserted a catheter into his antecubital  vein, and confirmed the position of the catheter tip in the right atrium  by use of radiography. His goal was to find a safe and effective way to  inject drugs for cardiac resuscitation. 50 Forssmann  soon extended his experiments to include the intracardiac injection of  contrast material through a catheter placed in the right atrium. His  contributions, along with the development of nontoxic contrast media and  the steady advances in radiological techniques, prepared the way for  the development of coronary angiography. 51
André Cournand and Dickinson  Richards, in 1941, used the cardiac catheter as a diagnostic tool for  the 1st time, applying catheterization techniques to measure right-heart  pressures and cardiac output. 47  For their landmark work, they shared a Nobel Prize in Medicine with  Forssmann in 1956. In 1958, Mason Sones performed selective coronary  arteriography in a series of more than 1,000 patients, and he published a  brief description of his technique in Modern Concepts of  Cardiovascular Diseases 4 years later. 52  This development initiated a period of rapid growth in coronary  arteriography during the mid 1960s. Melvin Judkins, a radiologist who  had studied coronary angiography with Sones, created his own system of  coronary imaging in 1967, introducing a series of specialized catheters  and perfecting the transfemoral approach. 53
8.  Open-Heart Surgery
Wilfred  Bigelow and his team performed open-heart procedures in animals with  the use of hypothermia in 1949. 54  This prompted more research on the applicability of hypothermia in  human beings. In 1953, John Lewis performed the 1st successful closure  of an atrial septal defect in a 5-year-old girl, using the open-heart  hypothermic technique that Bigelow's group had developed. 55  In the decade between the mid-fifties and the mid-sixties, surgical  research was very much focused on various techniques of hypothermia and  their possible clinical application.
The heart-lung machine, which offered additional  protection to vital organs, was used by John Gibbon in 1953 during the  repair of an atrial septal defect and was a major advance in open-heart  surgery. 56  In “Milestones in Chest Surgery,” Eloesser wrote, “Gibbon's idea and  its elaboration take their place among the boldest and the most  successful feats of man's mind.” 57  The experience gained with open-heart surgery for congenital lesions  enabled surgeons to attempt cardiac valve repair and replacement. In  1956, Walton Lillehei and his team corrected pure mitral regurgitation  with suture plication of the commissures under direct vision. After that  time, many surgeons around the world became involved in direct vision  repair, 58  and prosthetic valves were introduced for cardiac valve replacement.
In 1935, Claude Beck of the  Cleveland Clinic published his classic paper, “The development of a new  blood supply to the heart by operation,” which described his technique  of grafting a flap of the pectoralis muscle over the exposed epicardium  to create a new blood supply. 59 His work in  myocardial revascularization spanned more than 3 decades and captured  the imagination of many surgeons. Arthur Vineberg used the internal  mammary artery to provide a new source of blood to the myocardium in  1946. 60 This  technique became very popular; about 5,000 such operations were  performed between 1950 and 1970. In 1964, Vasilii Kolessov, a Russian  cardiac surgeon, performed the 1st internal mammary artery–coronary  artery anastomosis. 61  René Favaloro achieved a physiologic approach in the surgical  management of coronary artery disease—the bypass grafting procedure—at  the Cleveland Clinic in May of 1967. 62  He used a saphenous vein autograft to replace a stenotic segment of the  right coronary artery. Later that year, he began to use the saphenous  vein as a bypassing channel. Soon Dudley Johnson extended the bypass  procedure to include the left coronary arterial systems. 63  In 1968, Charles Bailey and Teruo Hirose 64  and George Green 65  used the internal mammary artery instead of the saphenous vein for  bypass grafting. Today, coronary artery bypass grafting has become one  of the most common operations and is performed all over the world.
9.  Automatic Implantable Cardiac Defibrillators
Perhaps the 1st successful attempt at electrical  defibrillation occurred in 1775 when Peter Abildgaard, a Danish  veterinarian, evaluated the effects of electrical shock and countershock  on chickens. 66 In 1899,  Jean-Louis Prevost and Frederic Batelli were the first to thoroughly  study the effects of electrical discharge on the heart. They noted that  if shock was applied within seconds of the onset of fibrillation, the  result was defibrillation, which successfully restored sinus rhythm. 67 During the  early 1930s, D.R. Hooker and his team refined the existing knowledge  about defibrillation. 68
The original concept of the artificial  pacemaker is attributed to Albert Hyman, whose paper on the topic  appeared in the Archives of Internal Medicine in 1932. 69 Fifteen  years later, Beck was the first to apply electrical defibrillation to a  human heart in the operating room. 70 Bigelow,  John Callaghan, and John Hopps, at the Banting Institute in Toronto,  developed a technique of transvenous pacing, which they reported in  1950; Smith and Stone Ltd. built the 1st commercial pacemaker to their  design. 71  In 1956, Paul Zoll and coworkers performed the 1st successful external  defibrillation in a human subject. 72  In Sweden, Åke Senning and Rune Elmqvist designed a miniature pulse  generator, which was implanted after a thoracotomy in 1958. 73  Wilson Greatbatch, in the United States, devised an implantable  pacemaker powered by a mercury-zinc battery. 74  The early devices were all asynchronous; the 1st atrioventricular (AV)  synchronous pacemaker, which simulated a true physiologic state, was  implanted in 1962. 75
These achievements and the expanding  knowledge of clinical electrophysiology led to the invention of the  automatic implantable cardiac defibrillator (AICD). This device was  meant to abort ventricular fibrillation at its onset, thus averting the  inevitably fatal outcome. Michel Mirowski, Morton Mower, and William  Staewen at Sinai Hospital of Baltimore collaborated on the AICD in 1969.  The next year, they published their animal experiments in the Archives  of Internal Medicine. 76  The concept of the AICD generated a lot of criticism, 77  but the Baltimore group continued to pursue their research. Marlin  Heilman (the founder of Medrad, a small company that supplied  angiographic catheters), joined that group in 1972. Heilman helped to  make sensing circuits that could identify ventricular fibrillation on  the basis of a mathematical formula called the probability density  function. 77  In February 1980, after extensive animal research, Mirowski's team  successfully treated their 1st human patient with an AICD. 78  In their first 50 patients, the mortality rate was less than 10%. Soon  the AICD became the treatment of choice for patients with  life-threatening ventricular tachyarrhythmias by consistently  outperforming the best medications available for these patients.
10.  Coronary Angioplasty
In  1964, Charles Dotter and Melvin Judkins described a new technique for  relieving stenosis of the iliofemoral arteries with rigid dilators. 79  Despite the fact that this technique was developed in Oregon, the  procedure was largely ignored in the United States because of technical  difficulties and complications. Nonetheless, this technique was used to  treat large numbers of patients in Europe. In Zurich, Andreas Gruentzig  substituted a balloon-tipped catheter for the rigid dilator and  performed the 1st peripheral balloon angioplasty in a human being in  1974. 80  After achieving success with coronary angioplasty in animals, Gruentzig  and his colleagues performed the 1st intraoperative balloon angioplasty  on the human heart. Soon, Gruentzig accomplished the 1st coronary  angioplasty in a patient who was awake. On 16 September 1977, Gruentzig  performed balloon angioplasty on an isolated stenosis of the proximal  left anterior descending coronary artery in a 37-year-old man who had  consented to angioplasty even after being informed that he would be the  1st patient so treated. 81  This procedure was followed by a landmark article in the New  England Journal of Medicine by Gruentzig's team, in which they  described their technique of percutaneous transluminal coronary  angioplasty (PTCA) as used in 50 patients. 82  The Gruentzig technique took the cardiologic community by storm, and  the era of interventional cardiology was born. This extraordinary  achievement could not have been accomplished without the previous  development of coronary angiography, coronary bypass surgery, and  peripheral vascular dilatation. An international registry of PTCA was  established to provide a method for systematic evaluation of this new  procedure. Even after Gruentzig's untimely death in 1985, his technique  continued to evolve and subsequently led to applications such as  coronary atherectomy (1986) and coronary stenting (1987). By 1997,  angioplasty had become one of the most common medical interventions in  the world.

 
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