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Clear the way: stenting opens jammed arteries in the brain.


By pushing a tiny mesh cylinder called a stent through blood vessels Blood vessels

Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names.
 leading from the groin to the head, doctors can prop open narrowed arteries in the brain much as they do in the heart, several new studies show.

A brain artery that's partially blocked because of atherosclerosis is a stroke waiting to happen. While blood thinners such as aspirin and warfarin warfarin (wôr`fərĭn), anticoagulant used to treat blood clots. In large doses it causes bleeding. Warfarin, mixed with bait, is used in rodent control.
warfarin

Anticoagulant drug, marketed as Coumadin.
 can ease blood flow through narrowed brain vessels, roughly one-fifth of patients with severe narrowing who get these drugs still suffer a stroke or brain hemorrhage or die of a vascular problem within 2 years.

Seeking a better alternative, scientists have adapted stents to fit brain arteries, which are smaller and more fragile than the arteries serving the heart. Two studies presented last week at the 2007 International Stroke Conference in San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , along with a trial reported last year, indicate that the still-experimental brain stents might work as well or better than drugs and have fewer adverse effects.

In one of the studies reported in San Francisco, Chinese researchers placed bare metal 1. bare metal - New computer hardware, unadorned with such snares and delusions as an operating system, an HLL, or even assembler. Commonly used in the phrase "programming on the bare metal", which refers to the arduous work of bit bashing needed to create these basic tools  stents in the brains of 213 people who had had a stroke or ministroke min·i·stroke
n.
See transient ischemic attack.


ministroke Transient ischemic attack, see there
 in response to atherosclerosis that had reduced the diameter of a brain artery by more than half. Only about 9 percent of the patients experienced a stroke in the stented artery during the 2 years following stent placement, says Wei-Jian Jiang, a cardiologist at Beijing Tiantan Hospital.

In another study, U.S. researchers analyzed data on 131 patients who had a brain artery 82 percent occluded, on average. Most had already suffered a stroke or ministroke. All received a newer, more flexible stent that springs open at the target site. The device reduced the average size of the occlusion occlusion /oc·clu·sion/ (o-kloo´zhun)
1. obstruction.

2. the trapping of a liquid or gas within cavities in a solid or on its surface.

3.
 to 20 percent, says study coauthor Osama O. Zaidat, a neurologist at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.

In a third study, published in the October 2006 Stroke, only 2 of 59 patients with severely narrowed brain arteries experienced strokes during the 40 months after they received drug-coated metal stents. There were few other complications, and almost all the stented arteries remained open, says study coauthor Tudor G. Jovin, a neurologist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) is a leading American healthcare provider and institution for medical research. It consistently ranks in US News and World Report's "Honor Roll" of the approximately 15 best hospitals in America. .

The studies establish that stents can be placed inside the brain and dramatically improve blood flow, Zaidat says. The next step will be an efficacy trial in which the researchers randomly assign some of the participants to get a stent, he says.

Brain stenting is a new science. It's still not clear which stent works best, says Jovin. "We're going through what cardiology went through 10 or 15 years ago," he notes. Learning to insert the stent takes time because the head's blood vessels "are very tortuous, and there are long distances you have to traverse," Jovin says.

Some people are cautiously optimistic. "These are good devices," says Robert J. Adams
  • Jeff Adams, Canadian Paralympian
  • Jeffrey Adams (mathematician)
  • John Adams, American president
  • John Adams (disambiguation)
, a neurologist at the Medical College of Georgia In 1828, it was chartered by the state of Georgia as the Medical Academy of Georgia, with plans to offer a single course of lectures leading to a bachelor's degree. It opened the following year on October 1st at the Augusta hospital.  in Augusta. "But if you don't have the data on their efficacy, the story's not complete."
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Date:Feb 17, 2007
Words:502
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