Re: FW: Ultrasound here

From: DuBose, Terry (DuboseTerryJ@uams.edu)
Thu Nov 18 15:24:15 2004


Good point. May be they strap it to the head like a fetal monitor. Hope someone replicates the study soon... before I need it. Students needed a volunteer last week and they found some plaque in my carotid bulbs. :-(

Terry J. DuBose, M.S., RDMS, FSDMS, FAIUM

Associate Professor & Director Diagnostic Medical Sonography Program University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, CHRP 4301 West Markham St. Mail Slot #563 Little Rock, Arkansas, 72205 USA 501-686-6510 DuBoseTerryJ@UAMS.edu http://www.io.com/~dubose/ http://www.uams.edu/chrp/dms/default.asp http://www.obgyn.net/us/panel/panel.htm ---------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------- -----Original Message----- --------------------------------------------------------------- From: ultrasound@obgyn.net [mailto:ultrasound@obgyn.net] On Behalf Of art fougner, md Sent: Thursday, November 18, 2004 1:55 PM To: Multiple recipients of list ULTRASOUND Subject: Re: FW: Ultrasound here

Terry

i'm unclear as to whether the two hours of cw doppler monitoring involved a sonographer standing there for two hours, pencil probe in hand. this might seem difficult to replicate in a clinical setting.

art

At Thu, 18 Nov 2004, DuBose, Terry wrote: >
>http://www.cnn.com/2004/HEALTH/conditions/11/17/stroke.busting.ultrasou
n >d.ap/index.html
>
>Study: Sound waves help stroke victims
>
>Technique could one day help 15 percent of stroke victims
>
>Wednesday, November 17, 2004 Posted: 5:30 PM EST (2230 GMT)
>
>BOSTON, Massachusetts (AP) -- The same type of sound waves that pulsate
>from sonar fish-finders and ultrasound fetal monitors can dramatically
>boost the power of anti-clotting medicine and help it dissolve brain
>blockages in stroke patients, a study suggests.
>
>This technique may one day offer a safe accessory for helping up to
>100,000 U.S. patients a year, or 15 percent of the nation's stroke
>victims, doctors said.
>
>Imaging specialist Dr. Joseph Polak at New England Medical Center in
>Boston said more doctors should now consider adopting the technique.
>
>"It's a relatively big impact for a disease where we don't have many
>options," he said.

The study and Polak's commentary appeared Thursday in The New England >Journal of Medicine. The research was conducted by the University of
>Texas Medical School at Houston with partners in Canada and Spain.
>
>About 700,000 people suffer strokes each year in the United States,
>making it the leading cause of serious, long-term disability, according
>to the American Stroke Association. About 163,000 died from a stroke in
>2001, third only to heart disease and cancer.
>
>Like a heart attack within the brain, a stroke happens when a clot gets
>stuck in a blood vessel and cuts off circulation. The anti-clotting
drug >TPA is sometimes given to break up the clot before brain tissue starves
>for lack of blood.
>
>Ultrasound has long been used to diagnose strokes. In recent years,
>research has intensified on whether it can also supercharge the
>clot-breaking medication.
>
>In this experiment on 126 patients, it did just that -- and

impressively >so. Within two hours, almost half of the ultrasound patients with
>blockage of the middle cerebral artery showed restored blood flow or
>dramatic recovery from symptoms. With TPA alone, only 30 percent of
>patients did.
>
>Longer-term results were also favorable -- though not statistically
>significant in this study, because of the way it was designed. After
>three months, 42 percent of ultrasound patients were symptom-free or
>living independently, compared with only 29 percent of those treated
>with TPA alone.
>
>The risk of bleeding in the brain appeared to be small and no greater
>than with TPA alone.
>
>Exactly how the ultrasound works is not well understood. But
researchers >believe it may stir up blood near the clot, like a sonic spoon, and
thus >help mix in the drug. It may also help the drug bind directly to the
>clot.
>
>"Think about the clot being inside a closed box, and the ultrasound has
>somehow opened it a bit more," Polak said.
>
>Researchers said it is also possible that the sound waves shake up the
>clot and help break it up.
>
>The technique, as it is being tested now, is used only in patients who
>are treated with TPA. And TPA cannot be given to patients suffering
>bleeding in the brain, and must be administered within three hours of
>the onset of a stroke.
>
>Researchers in this study hope to take part soon in a more definitive
>test of the technique.
>
>Dr. Robert Adams, a neurologist at the Medical College of Georgia and
>adviser to the American Stroke Association, said the findings are
>especially impressive for the first few hours of recovery, but he would
>wait for more research on the effects months later before backing wider
>use of the technique.
>
>The ultrasound equipment, known as transcranial Doppler, is fairly
>common at major hospitals for diagnosing strokes but is rarely employed
>as a treatment. That is partly because it can take months to learn how
>to pinpoint clots with the lipstick-size wand.
>
>The study's lead researcher, Dr. Andrei Alexandrov at the University of
>Texas Medical School at Houston, is working on a simpler-to-operate
>device. "There are too few skilled operators to bring this technique to
>the emergency department where it's necessary," he said. "That's the
>major problem."
>
>Some scientists are also looking into whether ultrasound, at higher
>power, can safely blast away clots by itself, without medication.

--
art fougner, md
ich bin ein New Yorker

------------------------------------

Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended recipient(s) and may contain confidential and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender by reply e-mail and destroy all copies of the original message. ------------------------------------




recommended search...
Google
OBGYN.net forums endometriosis zone Web

use when must restrict search to only the ultrasound forum...
Enter search keywords:
Returns per screen: Require all keywords:

Return to  Ultrasound Forum Mail a New Message to the Forum: ultrasound@obgyn.net
Forum Administrator: terry.dubose@obgyn.net
Report Technical Problems: webmaster@obgyn.net
Last Updated: Wed Dec 2 05:32:39 2009

The American Medical Association is no longer designating CME hours for AMA Category II CME credit. However, physicians themselves may self designate learning activities as Category II CME credit hours if they feel it is of sufficient educational merit and meets the formal definitions of continuing medical education. OBGYN.net believes these interaction in this forum meets these criteria. For further information see the AMA web site.