
Witness History The invention of the balloon-expandable stent
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Oct 28, 2025 Julio Palmaz, an Argentinian physician and inventor of the balloon-expandable coronary stent, shares his inspiring journey from Argentina to groundbreaking medical innovation. He reveals how a piece of construction metal sparked the design of the stent at a conference. Discussing collaborations with a US Army cardiologist and unique funding sources, he details the evolution of his invention, clinical trials, and the incredible impact it has had on heart disease treatment worldwide. Julio's story highlights the spirit of innovation and global health improvement.
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Lightning-Bolt Idea On A Flight
- Julio Palmaz first conceived the stent idea after hearing Andres Gruntzig speak at a 1978 conference and sketched designs on a napkin mid-flight home.
- That moment of inspiration led him to pursue a scaffold to solve balloon angioplasty's limitations.
Research Infrastructure Enables Breakthroughs
- Julio saw U.S. research infrastructure as essential to turning ideas into published medical advances and moved to the U.S. to pursue it.
- He believed Argentina lacked the resources for the kind of experimental work he wanted to do.
Construction Scrap Became A Prototype
- A piece of expanded metal left by construction workers in Julio's house sparked the practical design breakthrough for the stent.
- He realised a solid tube with staggered slots could replace woven wire mesh to form a deployable scaffold.
