PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

A game-changing way to treat stroke

2025-06-04
(Press-News.org) When treating an ischemic stroke – where a clot is blocking the flow of oxygen to the brain – every minute counts. The more quickly doctors can remove the clot and restore blood flow, the more brain cells will survive, and the more likely patients are to have a good outcome. But current technologies only successfully remove clots on the first try about 50% of the time, and in about 15% of cases, they fail completely.

Researchers at Stanford Engineering have developed a new technique called the milli-spinner thrombectomy that could significantly improve success rates in treating strokes, as well as heart attacks, pulmonary embolisms, and other clot-related diseases. In a paper published June 4 in Nature, the researchers used both flow models and animal studies to show that the milli-spinner significantly outperforms available treatments and offers a new approach for fast, easy, and complete clot removal.

“For most cases, we’re more than doubling the efficacy of current technology, and for the toughest clots – which we’re only removing about 11% of the time with current devices – we’re getting the artery open on the first try 90% of the time,” said co-author Jeremy Heit, chief of Neuroimaging and Neurointervention at Stanford and an associate professor of radiology. “It’s unbelievable. This is a sea-change technology that will drastically improve our ability to help people.”

Taking advantage of tangles Blood clots are held together by tangles of fibrin, a tough, thread-like protein that traps red blood cells and other material to form a sticky clump. Typically, doctors try to remove them by inserting a catheter into the artery and either vacuuming up the clot or snaring it with wire mesh. But these methods don’t always work and can snap the fibrin threads, causing pieces of the clot to break off and get lodged in new, harder to reach places.

“With existing technology, there’s no way to reduce the size of the clot. They rely on deforming and rupturing the clot to remove it,” said Renee Zhao, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering and senior author on the paper. “What’s unique about the milli-spinner is that it applies compression and shear forces to shrink the entire clot, dramatically reducing the volume without causing rupture.”

The milli-spinner, which also reaches the clot through a catheter, consists of a long, hollow tube that can rotate rapidly, with a series of fins and slits that help create a localized suction near the clot. This applies two forces – compression and shear – to roll the fibrin threads into a tight ball without breaking them.

Imagine a loose ball of cotton fibers (or a handful of long hair pulled from a hairbrush, if you’d prefer). If you press it between your palms (compression) and rub your hands together in a circle (shear), the fibers will become increasingly tangled into a smaller, denser ball. The milli-spinner is able to do this same thing to the fibrin threads in a clot, using suction to compress the clot against the end of the tube and rapidly spinning to create the necessary shear.

Zhao and her colleagues showed that the milli-spinner could reduce a clot to as little as 5% of its original volume. The process shakes free the red blood cells, which move normally through the body once they aren’t trapped in fibrin, and the now-tiny fibrin ball is sucked into the milli-spinner and out of the body.

“It works so well, for a wide range of clot compositions and sizes,” Zhao said. “Even for tough, fibrin-rich clots, which are impossible to treat with current technologies, our milli-spinner can treat them using this simple yet powerful mechanics concept to densify the fibrin network and shrink the clot.”

A surprising success The milli-spinner design is an extension of Zhao’s work on millirobots – tiny, origami-based robots built to swim through the body to dispense medicine or assist with diagnostics. The spinning hollow structure with fins and slits was intended as a propulsion mechanism, but when the researchers realized that it was also creating localized suction, they decided to see if it could have other uses as well.

“At first, we simply wondered whether this suction could help remove a blood clot,” Zhao said. “But when we tested the spinner on a clot, we observed a striking clot color change, from red to white, along with a dramatic reduction in volume. Honestly, it felt like magic. We didn’t fully understand the mechanism at the time.”

Intrigued by this unexpected and unprecedented clot response, the researchers set out to uncover the underlying mechanism and then went through hundreds of design iterations to make the milli-spinner as efficient and effective as possible. But they haven’t forgotten about its propulsion possibilities. Zhao and her colleagues are also working on an untethered version of the milli-spinner that could swim freely through blood vessels to target and treat clots.

While they have focused on treating blood clots first, there are many other potential uses for the milli-spinner, Zhao said. She and her team are already working on using the milli-spinner’s localized suction to capture and remove kidney stone fragments.

“We’re exploring other biomedical applications for the milli-spinner design, and even possibilities beyond medicine,” Zhao said. “There are some very exciting opportunities ahead.”

Knowing the difference it could make for stroke patients and those with other blood clot-related diseases, Zhao, Heit, and their colleagues are hoping to get the milli-spinner thrombectomy approved for patient use as soon as possible. They have started a new company that licenses the technology from Stanford in order to develop and bring it to market, with clinical trials planned for the near future.

“What makes this technology truly exciting is its unique mechanism to actively reshape and compact clots, rather than just extracting them,” Zhao said. “We’re working to bring this into clinical settings, where it could significantly boost the success rate of thrombectomy procedures and save patients’ lives.”

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Which mesh is best? Outcomes for abdominal ventral hernia repair patients projected by new research model

2025-06-04
Key Takeaways  Different materials, different outcomes: Time-to-recurrence was longest for long-acting resorbable meshes (166.4 months), followed by synthetic meshes (132.1 months), and shortest for biologic meshes (80 months).  Cost considerations: While long-acting resorbable mesh is projected to perform the best, its cost is approximately 2x that of synthetic mesh.  No national guideline: More guidance is needed for best practices in mesh choice and follow-up schedule.  CHICAGO — Repair of ...

Novel truncated RNAs from jumping DNA encode reverse transcriptases in aging human brain

2025-06-04
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia and affects more than a tenth of Americans aged 65 and older. The disease has proven difficult to develop new treatments for, and available treatment options are limited. With cases in the U.S. projected to more than double by 2050, more therapies are needed to improve patients’ quality of life and reduce the burden on the health care system and family caregivers.   Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys and elsewhere have recently reported real-world links in medical records associating common HIV drugs with a reduced incidence of Alzheimer’s disease. The ...

Most-viewed TikTok videos on inflammatory bowel disease show low quality

2025-06-04
June 4, 2025 — The most popular TikTok videos related to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) have millions of views – but very low scores for quality of medical information, reports a study in the May/June issue of Gastroenterology Nursing, Official Journal of the Society of Gastroenterology Nurses and Associates. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer. "Social media platforms such as TikTok have the potential to reach a wide audience of people living with IBD, particularly young adults," comments lead author Samantha Winders, ...

Study shows making hydrogen with soda cans and seawater is scalable and sustainable

2025-06-04
Hydrogen has the potential to be a climate-friendly fuel since it doesn’t release carbon dioxide when used as an energy source. Currently, however, most methods for producing hydrogen involve fossil fuels, making hydrogen less of a “green” fuel over its entire life cycle.  A new process developed by MIT engineers could significantly shrink the carbon footprint associated with making hydrogen.  Last year, the team reported that they could produce hydrogen gas by combining seawater, recycled soda cans, and caffeine. The question then was whether the benchtop process could be applied at an industrial scale, and at ...

Could dietary changes -- even after obesity -- help prevent pancreatic cancer?

2025-06-04
Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest forms of cancer, killing 87% of patients within five years. Previous studies have shown that obesity can increase pancreatic cancer risk by around 50%. In a new study from the University of California, Davis, researchers showed evidence that switching from a high-fat diet to a low-fat diet slowed pancreatic precancer development in mice, even after weight gain and precancerous changes began. The research was published in the Journal of Nutrition. “This study shows that managing excess body weight is very important,” said corresponding author Gerardo Mackenzie, professor and chair of the UC Davis Department ...

From rubble to rockets: Turning scrap metal into essential equipment

2025-06-04
Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) has been awarded $6.3 million for a groundbreaking initiative that could transform additive manufacturing by enabling the rapid production of high-quality components from scrap metal. This innovative approach to additive manufacturing, funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), aims to ensure that essential components can be produced even in the most resource-limited environments, including where access to traditional supply chains is limited, such as battlefields or remote search-and-rescue locations. The ...

Museum specimens offer new lens on pollution history

2025-06-04
A new study highlights a surprising lens for tracking pollution trends over centuries: preserved plants and animals housed at natural history museums around the world. According to Shane DuBay, a researcher at The University of Texas at Arlington, these specimens contain valuable environmental data that can help scientists reconstruct pollution trends spanning more than 200 years. “We often lack the historical pollution data needed to understand the links between environmental contamination and long-term health effects, such as cancer, asthma, cognitive disorders and premature ...

Studying the 12C+12C fusion reaction at astrophysical energies using HOPG target

2025-06-04
A research team from the Institute of Modern Physics and Sichuan University has performed a direct measurement of the 12C+12C fusion reaction at a center-of-mass energy of 2.22 MeV using the LEAF accelerator facility. The experiment employed a highly intense 12C2+ beam, a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) target known for its low background, and a ΔE–E telescope combining a Time Projection Chamber and silicon detectors. This setup enabled detection of extremely rare fusion events, with a thick-target yield on the order of 10−17 ...

Bacteria hitch a ride on yeast puddles to zoom around

2025-06-04
In the world of microorganisms, microbes compete for turf, spew chemicals at foes, and sometimes exploit the microscopic terrain to gain an edge. In a study published June 4 in the Cell Press journal Biophysical Journal, researchers found that bacteria can speed up by using the fluid pockets shaped by neighboring yeast cells. These microscopic moisture trails allow bacteria to swim farther and spread faster—revealing a new way for microbes to travel through soil, plants, and the human body.  “When studying microbial interactions, research often focuses on the chemical nature of these interactions,” says lead author Divakar Badal of Cornell University. ...

New non-invasive method discovered to enhance brain waste clearance

2025-06-04
Scientists at the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) have uncovered a non-invasive method to boost the brain’s natural waste drainage system—a discovery that could open new avenues for tackling age-related neurological disorders. In a study published in Nature, researchers from the IBS Center for Vascular Research, led by Director KOH Gou Young, along with senior researchers JIN Hokyung, YOON Jin-Hui, and principal researcher HONG Seon Pyo, demonstrated that precisely stimulating the lymphatics under skin on the neck and face can significantly enhance the flow of cerebrospinal ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tiny but mighty: sophisticated next-gen transistors hold great promise

World's first practical surface-emitting laser for optical fiber communications developed: advancing miniaturization, energy efficiency, and cost reduction of light sources

Statins may reduce risk of death by 39% for patients with life-threatening sepsis

Paradigm shift: Chinese scientists transform "dispensable" spleen into universal regenerative hub

Medieval murder: Records suggest vengeful noblewoman had priest assassinated in 688-year-old cold case

Desert dust forming air pollution, new study reveals

A turning point in the Bronze Age: the diet was changed and the society was transformed

Drought-resilient plant holds promise for future food production, study finds

To spot toxic speech online, try AI

UN-backed research team shows benefits of tracking ocean giants for marine conservation

Sharp-tailed grouse in south-central Wyoming potentially a distinct subspecies

Abdul Khan, MD, appointed chief executive officer of Ochsner River Region

A forward-looking approach to climate disaster preparation

UN-backed global research shows benefits of tracking ocean giants for marine conservation

Zebrafish model for an ultra-rare genetic disease identifies potential treatments

Masking, distancing and quarantines keep chimps safe from human disease, study shows

Dr. Warren Johnson honored with Weill Award

Adopting a healthy diet may have cardiometabolic benefits regardless of weight loss

New study reveals global warming accelerates antibiotic resistance in soils

Scientists argue for more FDA oversight of healthcare AI tools

Study finds dehorning of rhinos drastically reduces poaching

NIH researchers conclude that taurine is unlikely to be a good aging biomarker

Caterpillar factories produce fluorescent nanocarbons

Taurine is not a reliable biomarker for aging, longitudinal study shows

Lidar survey reveals expansive precolonial maize farming in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula

Dehorning of rhinos reduced poaching by 78% in Greater Kruger African reserves from 2017 to 2023

Retinal prosthesis bestows artificial vision in blind mice and detects near-infrared in large animals

Archaeologists uncover massive 1000-year-old Native American fields in Northern Michigan that defy limits of farming

Advance in creating organoids could aid research, lead to treatment

Groundbreaking study maps the movements of marine megafauna

[Press-News.org] A game-changing way to treat stroke