Follow ABC 36 on Twitter
Blood Clot Ultrasound
Written by Kristi Runyon   
Thursday, 04 March 2010 14:00
Kristi Runyon

 

Intracerebral hemorrhage accounts for 10 to 15 percent of all strokes; 40 to 50 percent of them die within 30 days. Sometimes surgery can be done to remove the clot that forms after an intracerebral hemorrhage. An experimental system uses ultrasound waves to permeate and dissolve the brain clot.

An intracerebral hemorrhage damages brain tissue in two ways. First, the ruptured artery means blood can’t get to a part of the brain fed by that blood vessel. Second, the leaking blood pools inside the brain, putting extra pressure on the surrounding brain tissue, damaging those cells as well. Signs depend upon the location and size of the bleed. Patients may have a sudden, severe headache, nausea, vomiting, confusion, tiredness, sudden weakness or numbness of the face or one side of the body, vision problems, speech problems, seizures or loss of consciousness.

The American Heart Association estimates 795,000 strokes occur annually in the U.S. Intracerebral hemorrhage accounts for 10 to 15 percent of all strokes. Although less common than those caused by a clot, hemorrhagic strokes are more likely to cause death. About 40 to 50 percent of patients having an intracerebral hemorrhage die within 30 days. 70 percent of the survivors are left with some type of impairment.

Treating Clots Caused by Brain Hemorrhage
Blood that leaks from an intracerebral hemorrhage pools inside the brain, eventually congealing into a gel. David Newell, M.D., Neurosurgeon with the Swedish Neuroscience Institute in Seattle, WA, says it can take weeks for the body to break down this jelly-like clot. In the meantime, the surrounding brain cells are subjected to damaging pressure. Patients may need to be monitored in the hospital or intensive care unit for weeks to months.

Doctors may operate to reduce brain pressure and further risk of damage from the clot. To access the source of bleeding and the clot, doctors may either remove a small piece of the skull or drill a hole into the skull. The bleeding is stopped and the coagulated blood is suctioned away.

Ultrasound for Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Newell says the traditional surgical techniques to remove blood clots after a hemorrhage have their own set of risks, including rebleeding. Recently, he tested a technique that uses a combination of the clot-busting drug, tPA, with ultrasound to target the congealed clot after an intracerebral hemorrhage.

The technique uses the EkoSonic® Endovascular System by EKOS®. First, a tiny hole is drilled into the skull. Then, using a GPS-like navigation tool, doctors feed a catheter into the hemorrhage. Once in place, the ultrasound-tipped catheter goes to work. The ultrasound waves allow the tPA to permeate the clot, speeding the ability of the drug to dissolve the clot. The treatment is delivered continuously for a total of 24 hours. The liquefied clot is then drained through another catheter into a collection bag.

A small feasibility study was recently completed for 10 patients with clots from an intracerebral hemorrhage. Newell says with tPA alone, it can take three to four days for a clot to dissolve, subjecting the brain to prolonged pressure. With the EkoSonic® Endovascular System, all the patients responded to the treatment within 24 hours.

Researchers must apply for FDA approval before testing the technique in a larger group of people. Newell is hopeful the treatment will be available to other doctors within a few years.


AUDIENCE INQUIRY
For general information on stroke or intracerebral hemorrhage:
American Heart Association, http://www.americanheart.org
American Stroke Association, http://www.strokeassociation.org
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, http://www.ninds.nih.gov
National Stroke Association, http://www.stroke.org


Research compiled and edited by Barbara J. Fister

 

© 2010 Medstar Television, Inc. All Rights Reserved
 

 

  Bookmarks  Email This   Hits : 1066
Comments (1)

Guest Michelle says:
2010-Mar-06 00:50
avatar
My Fiance was 1 of the 10
My fiance was one of the receipiants ofthis procedure. Experiencing this experience first hand, has given us a personalize appreciation for all the funding, reasearch, time and much more that has given life back to our family. Our hope is that it does not take years for this technology procedure to begin saving more lives. It is here now and additional funding, knowledge and opportunities will save lives. We learned my fiance life, by chance was saved.
Reply Reply  
Good
 
0
 
Bad
 
0
   Report Abuse Report
Your Comment
Name*
Email*
Website
Title*
UBBCode
B
i
u
Quote
Code
List
List item
Img
URL
YouTube
Comment*
 0 Characters
Verify Code* 
 Notify me when new comment post on this article.
 I have read and agree to Term and Agreement
By submitting your comments ABC 36 we reserve the right, at our sole discretion, delete, or deny approval of your comments for any reason at any time without further notice.

We do not rent, sell, or exchange your name, personal information, or email address to third-party companies for their marketing purposes.

Please allow up to 24 hours for your post to be approved.

Thanks from ABC 36 for your comment on our site wtvq.com
 

Banner
Banner
  
Banner

Banner