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CNI Stroke Center
701 East Hampden Ave., Suite 415
Englewood, CO 80113
Phone: (303) 597-1724
Fax: (303) 788-7666
E-mail: NPyle@TheCNI.org
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Our Comprehensive Stroke Center is accredited
Swedish Medical Center, home of the CNI's Stroke Center, was the first Primary Stroke Center
in the region

Stroke Treatment

An acute stroke (brain attack) is very similar to a heart attack in that a blood clot suddenly blocks an important blood vessel feeding the brain. If that blood clot can be quickly dissolved, the devastating effects of the stroke often can be partially or totally relieved, and blood flow is restored to that part of the brain. 

The good experience of rapidly treating heart attacks with clot-busting medicines has led to the same approach in brain attacks. A very effective therapy, similar to the treatment of heart attack, is now available for acute stroke. Intravenous administration of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) within the first three hours of stroke symptoms has been shown to be very effective.

The sooner a blood clot is dissolved in the brain the better. If a stroke patient comes to the emergency room immediately after symptoms occur, the emergency room doctor and neurologist can administer t-PA intravenously within the first three hours of symptoms. However, if three hours of symptoms already have elapsed, then an x-ray guided angiogram and catheter-directed administration of t-PA often can be performed. This catheter-directed treatment has been shown to work well up to six hours after stroke symptoms occur. After six hours the brain often has suffered irreversible damage and these new clot-buster drugs are not recommended.

At the Colorado Neurological Institute (CNI) both the intravenous clot-buster therapy (hours 1-3) and the catheter-directed therapy (hours 4-6) are available. Since no aggressive therapy is currently available after six hours of stroke symptoms have elapsed, it is important to come immediately to your local emergency room when stroke symptoms occur and ask about t-PA therapy.

Intravenous Clot-Busting Therapy

A large clinical trial (NINDS trial) has shown doctors what they have felt intuitively for years - that by dissolving blood clots to the brain early, they often can improve quality of life in stroke patients. This relatively new clot-buster medicine (t-PA) has its best effect when given intravenously within the first three hours of stroke symptoms. In fact, the sooner it is given the better.

Catheter-Directed Therapy

If a patient comes to the emergency room after three hours of symptoms, another form of therapy has been shown to be effective. This therapy is performed by administering the new clot-buster medicine (t-PA) through a catheter that is advanced from the groin directly into the brain and the offending blood clot. This often allows doctors to reverse the effects of the stroke. This has been shown to be effective up to six hours after stroke symptoms have begun. More specifically, using x-ray guidance, a doctor can guide a thin, hollow plastic tube from the groin directly into the blood clot and hopefully dissolve it by infusing only a small amount of the clot-busting drug.

Brain Attack Management

The following PowerPoint presentations were given at the 2004 Brain Attack Symposium:

Intensive Care Management of Stroke
by David M. Greer M.D., Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School

Prehospital and Emergency Department Management of Acute Stroke
by Chris Holmes, MD FACEP, Staff Emergency Physician Swedish Medical Center and Sr. Clinical Instructor University of Colorado Health Science Center

 

Go to Swedish Medical Center website
Colorado Neurological Institute Stroke Center
701 East Hampden Ave., Suite 415, Englewood, CO 80113
Phone: (303) 597-1724, Fax: (303) 788-7666, E-mail: NPyle@TheCNI.org
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The medical information presented on this website is meant for general educational purposes only.
Persons should consult their physician regarding specific medical concerns or treatment. Copyright 2007, Colorado Neurological Institute.


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