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How often do stents or bypass grafts fail or block again over time? 

Author: Harry Whitmore, Medical Student | Reviewed by: Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, MBBS

When you have a stent fitted or undergo bypass surgery, it is natural to hope it is a â€˜cure.’ In reality, both procedures are treatments that restore blood flow for a period of time, but neither stops the underlying disease process. Arteries can block again, either at the same spot (failure of the fix) or in a new spot (progression of disease). Understanding the failure rates helps you stay vigilant and motivated to protect your investment. 

What We’ll Discuss in This Article 

  • The â€˜Warranty’ Concept: Nothing is permanent; both fixes have a lifespan. 
  • Stent Failure (Restenosis): Why scar tissue is the enemy, not plaque. 
  • Bypass Failure: The difference between artery grafts (LIMA) and vein grafts (leg). 
  • The Timeline: When failure is most likely to happen (First year vs. 10 years). 
  • Warning Signs: How to know if your fix is failing. 
  • Prevention: Why quitting smoking is the single biggest factor in longevity. 

Stent Failure: The â€˜Scar Issue’ 

Stents fail in two main ways: sudden clotting (rare) or gradual narrowing (common). 

Restenosis (The Slow Fail) 

This is when scar tissue grows through the mesh of the stent, narrowing the artery again. It is the body’s attempt to heal the â€˜injury’ caused by the stent expansion. 

  • Bare Metal Stents (Old): Had a high failure rate (20–30% blocked again within 6 months). 
  • Drug-Eluting Stents (New): These are coated with medication that stops scar tissue growing. The failure rate is now very low, under 5% in the first year. 
  • Timing: If a stent is going to narrow due to scarring, it almost always happens within the first 6 to 12 months. If it stays open for a year, it usually stays open long-term. 

In-Stent Thrombosis (The Sudden Fail) 

This is a sudden blood clot forming on the metal. It causes a massive heart attack. 

  • Cause: Usually caused by stopping antiplatelet medication (Aspirin/Clopidogrel) too early. 

Bypass Graft Failure: Veins vs. Arteries 

Bypass surgery uses â€˜spare parts’ from your body. The lifespan depends heavily on where the graft came from. 

Artery Grafts (The Gold Standard) 

The Left Internal Mammary Artery (LIMA) is taken from the chest wall. It is designed to carry blood under high pressure. 

  • Failure Rate: It is incredibly durable. Over 90–95% are still open and working perfectly 20 years later. This is why it is used for the most important heart artery (LAD). 

Vein Grafts (From the Leg) 

The Saphenous Vein is taken from the leg. Veins are designed for low pressure, so they struggle to handle the high-pressure environment of the heart.  

  • Failure Rate: 
  • Year 1: About 10–15% block early due to clotting or surgical issues. 
  • Year 10: About 50% of vein grafts are blocked or significantly narrowed. 
  • Why: They develop their own accelerated form of atherosclerosis (hardening). 

Comparison of Durability 

Procedure Risk of Failure (Year 1) Risk of Failure (Year 10) Main Cause of Failure 
Drug-Eluting Stent Low (<5%) Moderate (New disease elsewhere) Scar tissue (early) or new plaque (late) 
Artery Bypass (LIMA) Very Low (<2%) Very Low (<5%) Almost indestructible 
Vein Bypass (Leg) Moderate (10–15%) High (~50%) Veins degrading under pressure 

How do I know if it has blocked? 

The symptoms of failure are usually identical to your original symptoms. 

  • Gradual Return: If you notice the familiar chest tightness creeping back when you walk up a hill, it suggests gradual re-narrowing (Restenosis or Vein Graft failure). 
  • Sudden Pain: If you have sudden, severe chest pain at rest, it suggests a sudden clot (Stent Thrombosis or Graft Occlusion) – Call 999

Can it be fixed again? 

Yes. 

  • Failed Stent: Can often be treated with another stent (a â€˜stent within a stent’) or a special balloon coated with medication.6 
  • Failed Bypass: Is harder to fix. Surgeons are reluctant to operate twice (re-do CABG is very high risk). Often, doctors will try to place a stent inside the failed bypass graft or manage it with medication. 

Conclusion 

The â€˜durability gap’ is why surgeons prefer using artery grafts (LIMA) wherever possible. A modern stent is an excellent medium-term solution with a <5% failure rate, but an arterial bypass is a lifetime solution. However, the most significant factor in failure isn’t the metal or the graft, it’s you. Smoking doubles the risk of stent failure and triples the risk of vein graft failure. Taking your statins and aspirin faithfully is the only way to beat the statistics. 

Does a failed stent mean another heart attack? 

Not necessarily. Gradual narrowing (restenosis) usually just brings back angina symptoms (pain on exertion). Sudden clotting (thrombosis) causes a heart attack.

Why don’t they use arteries for all bypasses? 

You have a limited supply. The LIMA is the best, but most people only have two mammary arteries (left and right). Using the arm artery (Radial) is possible but risks hand numbness.8 Veins are plentiful and long, making them necessary for multiple bypasses. 

Can I have a stent if my bypass fails? 

Yes. It is very common to put a stent into an old vein graft or into the native artery that the graft was supposed to bypass. 

Will I feel the stent narrowing? 

You won’t feel the metal itself, but you will feel the return of angina, breathlessness or tightness when you exert yourself. 

How can I protect my vein grafts? 

Statins. Aggressive cholesterol lowering prevents the veins from clogging up with plaque. Aspirin keeps them flowing. 

Authority Snapshot 

This article was written by Dr. Stefan Petrov, a UK-trained physician (MBBS) with extensive experience in cardiology and long-term disease management. Dr. Petrov has counselled many patients facing the decision between stenting and surgery, helping them understand the â€˜warranty period’ of each procedure. This content is reviewed to ensure alignment with NHS and European Society of Cardiology (ESC) data, providing realistic expectations about durability. 

Harry Whitmore, Medical Student
Author
Dr. Rebecca Fernandez, MBBS
Reviewer

Dr. Rebecca Fernandez is a UK-trained physician with an MBBS and experience in general surgery, cardiology, internal medicine, gynecology, intensive care, and emergency medicine. She has managed critically ill patients, stabilised acute trauma cases, and provided comprehensive inpatient and outpatient care. In psychiatry, Dr. Fernandez has worked with psychotic, mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders, applying evidence-based approaches such as CBT, ACT, and mindfulness-based therapies. Her skills span patient assessment, treatment planning, and the integration of digital health solutions to support mental well-being.

All qualifications and professional experience stated above are authentic and verified by our editorial team. However, pseudonym and image likeness are used to protect the reviewer's privacy. 

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