Monday, December 10, 2012

Stroke Telemedicine

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQdkBKF8p5g&feature=youtu.be
Dominique Cadilhac and Chris Bladin speak about telemedicine - paper is coming soon to IJS.
IJS is experimenting with coding - have you seen this ground breaking work on fatigue with Gillian Mead and martin Dennis? Keep an eye out for more stroke and fatigue papers as this topic garners more and more attention.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Sri Lanka World Stroke Day

 Launching the Stroke Solidarity String on World Stroke Day 2012 at Temple Trees in Sri Lanka by presenting the string to His Excellency the President Mahinda Rajapaksha by the President of the National Stroke Association of Sri Lanka, Dr. Padma Gunaratne. Hon Maithripala Sirisena, Minister of Health and Dr. Harsha Gunasekara, Secretary of the stroke Association are also present.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Changes in spleen size


International Journal of Stroke Managing Editor spoke to Drs. Sean Savitz and Farhaan Vahidy on the eve of the online publication of this very novel study. You can download this interview here. 


The spleen in stroke patients undergoes dynamic changes of contractions and re-expansion in the days following the onset of stroke symptoms, releasing inflammatory cells and contributing to further brain injury, according to researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Medical School.

“We’ve known from animal studies that the spleen contracts after stroke, followed by the release of inflammatory white blood cells leading to secondary brain injury, so we wanted to observe what happens to the spleen in patients after a stroke,” said Sean I. Savitz, principal investigator and professor of neurology at the UTHealth Medical School. 

Photo credit: NIH
“This is a completely understudied area. The spleen is not normally an organ that neurologists or neuroscientists pay attention to. This was our initial attempt to look at the size of the spleen in stroke patients.”

The spleen is part of the lymphatic system, which fights infection by releasing white blood cells. It also helps control the amount of blood in the body and destroys old and damaged cells.

The study included 29 stroke patients and 20 healthy volunteers. The research team performed daily abdominal ultrasounds to measure the size of the spleens. In the stroke patients, spleens initially reduced in size and then re-expanded. The spleens of the healthy volunteers showed minimal variation in daily spleen size compared with the stroke patients.
Savitz said the study demonstrated a good correlation between the contraction of the spleen and the amount of white blood cells in the body. The results also suggested that some patients whose spleens contracted for a longer period of time, releasing more inflammatory white blood cells, had poorer clinical outcomes. Further studies will be needed to confirm and explain these early findings, Savitz said.

Savitz and fellow researchers became interested in studying the spleen after animal studies at UT-Health and elsewhere showed that stem cells administered intravenously after a stroke travelled to the spleen, as well as to the brain.

“The big question was why,” said Savitz, who is director of the Stroke Program at UTHealth and an attending physician at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center. “Emerging work by our group and other researchers suggest that some types of stem cells have a dampening effect on the inflammatory response emanating from the spleen. The spleen is a possible target in the future for treating stroke.”
Savitz’s research team at UTHealth included first authors Preeti Sahota, M.D., and Farhaan Vahidy, M.D. 

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

A little bit of art...

IJS are preparing to interview Swedish Neurologist Barbro B Johansson and I was touched by this image and historical note on her web page.
Her website 'banner' held this picture of a beautiful sculpture and I have left in tact the historical note she made about it as seen below.


Historical note: I took the picture of the sculpture on the top left when I visited the Institute of Neurosurgery and Brain Research in Santiago, Chile 1961. It is made by Marta Covin, a famous Chilean Sculptress (1905-1993), using the hands of Alfonso Asenjo as a model. Asenjo was a pioneer in neurosurgery that founded the Institute of Neurosurgery and Brain Research in Chile already in 1939. Because he was a friend of Salvador Allende the sculpture was removed and disappeared in connection with the military coop in Chile 1973. I think that the sculpture is a too beautiful illustration of what makes us human to be forgotten.

This re-empahsises for me as Managing Editor for the journal, the important work people do in neurology and how globally this work in undertaken in all conditions; how each individual treatment and care impacts on each human being which resonates globally. This gift of quality of life is why we at this journal, the flagship of the World Stroke Organization must always remember that we are a global platform for a global voice, so no matter the conditions that people work in, or the resources available to them, we are there to share knowledge and support these amazing practitioners to reduce the burden of stroke.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Trade-offs between effectiveness and efficiency in stroke rehabilitation

Trade-offs between effectiveness and efficiency in stroke rehabilitation

Keywords:

  • activities of daily living;
  • effectiveness;
  • efficiency;
  • rehabilitation;
  • stroke;
  • trade-off
Background Most stroke research has studied rehabilitation effectiveness and rehabilitation efficiency separately and not investigated the potential trade-offs between these two indices of rehabilitation.
Aims To determine whether there is a trade-off between independent factors of rehabilitation effectiveness and rehabilitation efficiency.
Methods Using a retrospective cohort study design, we studied all stroke patients (n=2810) from two sub-acute rehabilitation hospitals from 1996 to 2005, representing 87·5% of national bed-years during the same period.
Results Independent predictors of poorer rehabilitation effectiveness and log rehabilitation efficiency were • older age • race-ethnicity • caregiver availability • ischemic stroke • longer time to admission • dementia • admission Barthel Index score, and • length of stay.
Rehabilitation effectiveness was lower in females, and the gender differences were significantly lower in those aged ≤70 years (β −4·7 (95% confidence interval −7·4 to −2·0)). There were trade-offs between effectiveness and efficiency with respect to admission Barthel Index score and length of stay. An increase of 10 in admission Barthel Index score predicted an increase of 3·6% (95% confidence interval 3·2–4·0) in effectiveness but a decrease of 0·04 (95% confidence interval −0·05 to −0·02) in log efficiency (a reduction of efficiency by 1·0 per 30 days). An increase in log length of stay by 1 (length of stay of 2·7 days) predicted an increase of 8·0% (95% confidence interval 5·7–10·3) in effectiveness but a decrease of 0·82 (95% confidence interval −0·90 to −0·74) in log efficiency (equivalent to a reduction in efficiency by 2·3 per 30 days). For optimal rehabilitation effectiveness and rehabilitation efficiency, the admission Barthel Index score was 30–62 and length of stay was 37–41 days.

Conclusions

There are trade-offs between effectiveness and efficiency during inpatient sub-acute stroke rehabilitation with respect to admission functional status and length of stay.

Monday, October 22, 2012

WSC in pictures

Marc Fisher and Geoffrey Donnan talk about journals STROKE and IJS

INCOMING WSO PRESIDENT STEPHEN DAVIS
GEOFFREY DONNAN AT THE IJS BOARD MEETING





Dominique Cadhilaic, Marion Walker, Geoffrey Donnan and Julie Bernhardt


The Canadian Stroke Network

http://www.canadianstrokenetwork.ca/index.php/about/our-partners-links-page/provincialterritorial-strategies/

The Canadian Stroke Network have a great blog. This blog is an excellent example of where content can be published, free and easily accessible for the public. The International Journal of Stroke are planning on working with SSOs to build a public stroke network here on our blog, which has as of this month had over 31,000 views! Blogs are a great way of disseminating important information at low, or no cost!

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Aphasia the Movie

Aphasia the movie is playing at the Other Film Festival this coming Friday and IJS will attend. I briefly caught the end of this film and a fantastic forum with Carl, the films subject; and an audience of stroke survivors with aphasia, and clinicians at the Stroke Society Australasia in Sydney last month. 

In 2005 Carl McIntyre suffered a stroke resulting in aphasia - his journey is the subject of this film.

IJS will speak to Carl on Thursday morning before the screening and hopefully bring back a great video and sound recording capturing some of Carl's story and why the film was made.  

Friday, August 31, 2012

Stroke Society Australasia in pictures

Joanne Murray and Coralie English

Valerie Pomeroy

Stephanie Ho and Brenda Booth
Sandy Middleton and Simeon Dale  
Chris Levi and Jane Maguire

David Howells and Milos Pekny

Atte Meretoja

Nadine Andrew and Monique Kilkenny

Leonid Churilov Florey Statistician, Elise Cowley and Tina Soulis from NTA

Bernard Yan and Bruce Campbell

Ian Mosely

Lisa Walker, Sue Mosely, Sandra Petrolo, and WenWen Zhang
Tissa Wijeratne, Julie Bernhardt Director of the AVERT trial and Erin Godeke
Mhairi Macrae, Neuroscientist University of Glasgow

Fiona Ellery from NTA and AVERT Trial with Carmen Lahiff-Jenkins from IJS
Mark Longworth Smartstrokes, Richard Lindley SSA organiser and Dennis Crimmins

The WSO has a new website...

The WSO has a new website

http://www.world-stroke.org/

If you're having trouble with membership access to the journal please contact me: carmenl@unimelb.edu.au



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