By a stroke of luck, I passed this interesting video of Ed4Nurses while surfing on YouTube.
I am sharing it with you now just to brush up on what we have learned in school that for some could be from way, way back in the dark ages. :)
We tend to neglect stuff that we think we already know but since medicine continues to evolve and is not an exact science, we need to refresh our minds even with short videos such as this--
video credits: ed4nurses
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
What's New in Stroke?
Posted by
albularyo
at
4:44 PM
1 comments
Labels: Lecture Series, Stroke
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
To TPA or not to TPA?
That is the question.
Tissue Plasminogen Activator or more commonly TPA is a genetically- engineered blood clot dissolver that was first used to prevent heart damage after a heart attack since the late 1980s and through the years have been one of the mainstays in the treatment of Stroke because of its ability to reduce the long- term disability that usually result from the disease.
TPA is usually given within three hours of a Stroke which is usually known in legal parlance as the “window- period” or “golden hour” to be effective and beyond that there‘s the clear and present danger of bleeding in the brain which is the TPA’s worst complication .
However recent findings by researchers and scientists in the medical field are now reconsidering that old belief and are now concluding that it is still safe to give TPA beyond the so- called “three- hour” window period.
Here's the news from the Associated Press- Study: Extending time of stroke drug treatment OK
And here's the article of the study from the New England Journal of Medicine - Thrombolysis with Alteplase 3 to 4.5 Hours after Acute Ischemic Stroke
Posted by
albularyo
at
3:48 PM
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comments
Labels: health bits, NEJM, Stroke, TPA
