Archive for the ‘Stroke News’ Category

Stem Cells Help Stroke Patients

Saturday, August 27th, 2011

As shown on HOUSTON (KTRK) — ABC - By Christi Myers

The use  of adult stem cells in medicine has gained national attention, partly because of Gov. Rick Perry’s presidential campaign. The governor made headlines this month after announcing he’d undergone a stem cell treatment during back surgery. He called the surgical procedure innovative. Others call it a big risk.

Using stem cells for anything other than a bone marrow transplant is considered experimental. But doctors are looking at a growing number of ways they can use adult stems cells, including how they can be used to help stroke victims even weeks after they’ve had the attack.

“Suddenly I couldn’t talk at all,” the stroke victim told us.

She had a stroke just as she was leaving Los Angeles.

“Two hours later, I would have been on an airplane. That would not have been good,” she said.

We can’t tell you her name because of the high-profile stem cell study in which she is a patient. But three days after she left the hospital and returned to Houston, she received a novel stroke treatment — her own stem cells.

“When I had the stroke, I was interested in what could be done for stroke with stem cells,” the stroke victim said.

UT Health Scientist Dr. Sean Savitz is conducting the study. The stem cells taken from a patient’s bone marrow are injected into the carotid artery and then seem to jumpstart healing.

“Stimulate things like new blood vessel formation, the formation of new brain cells, perhaps a reduction in the inflammation that’s occurring after a stroke,” Dr. Savitz said.

In a previous study, stem cells had to be given within three days. This study pushes it to 19 days. The current stroke treatment, clot busters, drugs have to be given in three hours!

“My voice has come back, I couldn’t talk at all and I still sometimes can’t get words out but I’m getting much, much better,” the stroke victim said.

The 67-year-old cosmetics developer is back at work, two months after getting stem cells after her stroke.

“She’s independent when she’s functioning during the day and that’s what we’re really happy about, the rehabilitation when somebody’s able to go back to their life,” Dr. Savitz said.

“To be part of this is wonderful for myself and for hopefully other people I could help behind me,” the patient said.

The stem cell-stroke study is taking new patients. If you have a loved one who is within 19 days of a stroke, visit the UTHealth website for information.

 

(Copyright ©2011 KTRK-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

Positive Thoughts, Fewer Strokes

Monday, July 25th, 2011

By: Marissa Cevallos – Published July, 25, 2011  www.latimes.com

 

One more reason to keep your glass half full: Optimists might be less likely to have a stroke.

In new research, the more people believed good things would happen, the less likely they were to suffer a stroke within two years.  Psychology researchers examined 6,044 stroke-free adults who said how much they agreed with statements like “In uncertain times, I usually expect the best.”

Two years later, the researchers tracked which participants had suffered a stroke.  They found the more optimistic the person, the lower the odds of a stroke:  On an optimism scale of 3 to 18, each point increase in optimism was associated with an approximate 10% decrease in the likelihood of a stroke.

When the researchers took into consideration a host of other variables related to out-look on life, anxiety, cynical hostility, depression, negative affect, neuroticism and pessimism – a smaller but still significant association between optimism and stroke remained.  The results were published on-line Thursday in the journal Stroke.