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Advanced Stroke Treatment Saves 28-Year-Old September 9, 2009

Thanks to some quick thinking by a patient, effective teamwork and new medical technology, a 28-year-old Central Texas man is well on his way to recovery from a devastating, usually fatal ischemic stroke.

Joe Shin loves basketball, a sport that is physically demanding. But during an early April 2009 pick-up game with some friends, Joe realized what he was feeling went beyond simple fatigue. Weakness, dizziness, difficulty speaking. At age 28, he was having a stroke.

Joe asked his friends to call 9-1-1, a quick and crucial decision that Dr. Neal Rutledge, chair of the Seton Family of Hospitals Stroke Committee and Setons medical director of neuroradiology for the Seton Brain & Spine Center, wishes more people would make. If someone is having the classic symptoms of stroke, getting to a hospital quickly is vital.

Joe was taken to Seton Medical Center Austin, where a CT scan revealed a large clot. He was immediately given the clot-busting drug, t-PA. Dr. Rutledge then chose a new device called the Penumbra System that uses endovascular catheter-guided technology to break up and remove the clot restoring blood flow back to the patient's brain.

Before the development of clot-busting drugs and Penumbra, Joe might have faced life in a wheelchair - or death. "I had visions of being paralyzed for the rest of my life and didn't know what to think. I definitely didn't expect to walk out of the hospital just five days later," adds the patient.

Expanding the Window

Time is the most important factor in determining how well a patient can recover from a stroke. Like heart attack patients, individuals often postpone seeking treatment because they believe the condition will go away on its own.

The type of blood clot Joe had is a bad one, typically fatal or else the patient survives in a vegetative state. Most patients do not get to the hospital in a timely manner for treatment. Knowing when to call 9-1-1 is key, believes Dr. Rutledge. He says to remember the word FAST:

He describes the urgency for immediate stroke care in terms of windows. Clot-busting drugs have expanded the treatment window to three hours. Newer tools like the Penumbra System expand that window to eight hours.

Doctors at the Brain & Spine Center participated in the initial clinical trials for the Penumbra device. It was FDA-approved in January 2008. He and other interventional neuroradiologists at the Brain & Spine Center received specialized training on the Penumbra System that allows them to use the device within the Seton Family of Hospitals. "Fortunately for this patient, the Brain & Spine Center is one of a very few stroke programs in the country offering this treatment," says Dr. Rutledge.

Researchers at Setons Brain & Spine Center are exploring other ways of expanding the stroke treatment window to 14 hours.

Symptoms of Stroke

According to the American Stroke Association, warning signs of stroke include:

If one or more of these signs occur, don't wait, take action. Don't ignore them and hope they go away. Quick thinking and taking action gave Joe Shin back a normal life.

J. Neal Rutledge, MD
Neurointerventional Surgery, Radiology
Austin Radiological Association

Medical Park Towers
1301 W. 38th Street, Ste 113
Austin, TX 78705
Phone: (512) 926-3876

Dr. Rutledge received his medical training at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, then was a resident at Baptist Medical Center in Oklahoma City. He was a diagnostic and interventional neuroradiology fellow at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital Neurological Institute in New York City. He is board certified in neuroradiology by the American Board of Radiology and a member of the American Society of Therapeutic and Interventional Neuroradiology, American Society of Neuroradiology, American College of Radiology and the American Medical Association.


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