Stroke drug reveals a dark side.Quick treatment with a clot-busting drug can help prevent some of the damaging consequences of a stroke. However, new research suggests that this modern miracle may come at a price. A stroke occurs when a blood clot blood clot n. A semisolid, gelatinous mass of coagulated blood that consists of red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets in a fibrin network. blocks off an artery leading to the brain. Tissue plasminogen activator tissue plasminogen activator n. Abbr. TPA 1. An enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin, used to dissolve blood clots rapidly and selectively, especially in the treatment of heart attacks. 2. (tPA), a clot-dissolving substance produced by brain cells -- and manufactured by drug companies -- ordinarily forestalls these clots. When tPA can't handle the job, the clot squeezes off blood flow to parts of the brain. Studies have shown that stroke patients benefit from the tPA drug if it is given within 3 hours of the onset of symptoms, notes Gregory J. Del Zoppo of the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif. Stuart A. Lipton of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. in Boston and his colleagues decided to study the benefits of the drug for stroke patients by creating the equivalent of a stroke in mice. The researchers temporarily blocked one of two brain arteries in two groups of mice. The first group, genetically engineered genetically engineered adjective Recombinant, see there not to produce tPA, had less brain damage after the experimental stroke than the second group, which did make tPA. When the researchers injected the synthetic tPA into the brains of mice in the first group, the damaged areas doubled in size. The team describes its results in the February Nature Medicine. In an accompanying editorial, Del Zoppo questions whether a mouse study bears any relevance to human stroke patients. Lipton doesn't deny tPA's benefits to humans. He points out that tPA may kill a few brain cells while preserving many more by restoring blood flow. Thus, treatment with tPA still offers human stroke patients a net benefit, he says. Lipton's team is trying to design a drug that would aggressively dissolve blood clots Blood Clots Definition A blood clot is a thickened mass in the blood formed by tiny substances called platelets. Clots form to stop bleeding, such as at the site of cut. without killing brain cells. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , Lipton, a practicing neurologist, still gives his eligible stroke patients tPA. |
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