News Releases Stroke
Team's Success with Clot-Busting Drug Attracts International Attention
t-PA
drug stops nation's No. 3 killer in its tracks
Houston, Texas,
June 18, 2004 -- Stroke is the nation’s No. 3 killer and
leading cause of severe and long-term disability. The Stroke Treatment
Team at The University of Texas Medical School, in collaboration
with Memorial Hermann Healthcare System and Houston Fire Department-Emergency
Medical Services, is attracting worldwide attention for record
results achieved following administration of the intravenous tissue-type
plasminogen activator (t-PA) to stroke victims.
A news crew from
the Japan Broadcasting Corporation recently visited the Stroke Treatment
Team at Memorial Hermann Hospital and
Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospital
to observe these world-renowned experts administering the drug within three
hours of the onset of stroke symptoms. While American physicians
have used t-Pa for
years, t-Pa approval in Japan is still pending.
Led by James Grotta,
M.D., the Stroke Treatment Team is comprised of neurologists, emergency
physicians, emergency department
nurses, and paramedics. The team’s
success is due to its ability to quickly recognize stroke symptoms such as
difficulty walking, loss of balance or coordination, confusion,
trouble speaking or understanding,
sudden numbness or weakness, especially on one side of the body, and to immediately
alert other team members. Stroke specialists are available 24 hours a day
and paramedics and triage nurses are specially trained to identify
stroke symptoms.
t-Pa is for patients,
who suffer from ischemic strokes which are caused by blood clots
in the brain. The clot-busting drug,
which can reduce or reverse
symptoms
of the stroke, is the only approved treatment.
“Whereas nationally only about three percent of ischemic stroke patients
receive t-PA, we’re able to administer to as many as 20 percent of our
ischemic stroke patients,” said Dr. Grotta. “That dramatic difference
is a result of the well-defined, cooperative working relationship that exists
between our immediate response Stroke Team, the emergency departments of Memorial
Hermann and Memorial Hermann Southwest Hospitals and HFD-EMS.”
Japan Broadcasting
Corporation documented the team responding to and addressing real
crises affecting stroke victims and their
families to then educate
consumers in Japan about benefits they may soon realize.
For more information, contact Media Relations.
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