This narrative review looked at calcium-modifying dedicated balloons, including scoring balloons, cutting balloons, and ultra-high-pressure balloons. These tools are used during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) to help treat calcified coronary lesions, which are hardened areas in the heart's arteries. The study population consisted of patients with these specific calcified lesions, though the sample size was not reported as this was a review of existing information rather than a new experiment.
The main results indicate that these balloons provide versatile strategies for managing calcified disease. They can be used effectively as a first-line treatment or as a complementary tool alongside other procedures like intravascular lithotripsy or atherectomy. The review notes that how well the device works depends heavily on selecting the right lesion, using the correct procedural technique, and having guidance from intravascular imaging.
No specific adverse events, serious safety concerns, or discontinuations were reported in this review, as it did not track new patient outcomes. The main reason to be careful is that device performance is tightly linked to specific procedural details and lesion selection. Readers should take from this that an individualized, integrated, and morphology-tailored multimodality approach remains the most pragmatic strategy for treating these conditions.