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

New MRI analysis useful in predicting stroke complications caused by clot-busters

Johns Hopkins researchers find way to accurately measure blood-brain barrier damage

2012-12-21
(Press-News.org) Johns Hopkins researchers have developed a new way of looking at standard MRI scans that more accurately measures damage to the blood-brain barrier in stroke victims, a process they hope will lead to safer, more individualized treatment of blood clots in the brain and better outcomes.

The blood-brain barrier is a unique shielding of blood vessels that limits the passage of molecules from the blood stream into the brain. Without it, the brain is open to infection, inflammation and hemorrhage. Ischemic stroke patients are at risk of bleeding into the brain when there is damage to the barrier. By more accurately identifying areas of damage, the researchers, in a report published in the journal PLOS ONE, say they hope to use their new tool to predict and reduce the risk of complications from clot-dissolving drugs used to treat this kind of stroke.

"A better characterization of blood-brain barrier damage opens the door to new approaches to treating stroke patients," says study leader Richard Leigh, M.D., an assistant professor of neurology and radiology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "We want to help patients, but we need to make sure our treatments don't make things worse."

In an ischemic stroke, a blood clot is stuck in a vessel, cutting off blood flow to a portion of the brain, which will begin to die the longer the clot remains. When patients come to the hospital within three-to-four hours of suffering an ischemic stroke, doctors quickly move to give them the intravenous clot-busting drug tPA, hoping that it will dissolve the clot without causing additional damage.

In some people — roughly 6 percent of stroke patients treated in this manner — there already is too much damage done to the blood-brain barrier, and use of the drug causes bleeding in the brain, severe injury and sometimes death. But doctors don't currently know which patients will have this bad outcome. In these situations, if physicians knew the extent of the damage to the blood-brain barrier, they would be able to choose a potentially safer treatment option, Leigh says.

Most stroke patients, Leigh notes, don't get to a hospital within the window for optimal tPA use, and physicians believe it is dangerous to give intravenous tPA to these patients for fear of hemorrhage. Sometimes more aggressive treatment is needed, such as pulling the clot out mechanically via a catheter threaded from the groin area or by directly injecting tPA into the brain.

Before any procedure, these patients traditionally receive an MRI to estimate the risks and benefits of such an aggressive approach. But there has been no reliable way to detect the subtle amount of blood-brain barrier damage that would offer clues about how well the patient would fare under various treatments.

That led Leigh to his efforts to develop new software that uses MRI images already being taken and overlays them with calculations that more precisely measure blood-brain barrier damage. Animal studies have already shown that blood-brain barrier damage is a predictive marker for risk of hemorrhage.

The use of the new MRI software could mean that for some patients, tPA could be safely used even if they arrive at the hospital later than safe-use guidelines indicate.

"It's a personalization of medicine," Leigh says. "Rather than lumping everyone together, we can figure out — on a case-by-case basis — who should and who shouldn't get which treatment. In the long run, we can increase the number of patients we can help and decrease the number who have complications."

Leigh and his colleagues say there is more research needed before his software enhancement can be widely used, but "proof of concept" has been established in a review of MRI scans from nine stroke patients with known blood-brain barrier damage. Each patient was found to have a different amount of damage. Leigh and his team are now looking at a larger group to better define the meaning of these variations and how physicians can use this information to choose the best treatment.

### Other Johns Hopkins researchers involved in the study include Shyian S. Jen, M.D.; Argye E. Hillis, M.D.; and Peter B. Barker, D.Phil.

For more information:

http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/neurology_neurosurgery/experts/profiles/team_member_profile/BD025DCD3437BDB5FA2D39EDE6C48886/Richard_Leigh

http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/neurology_neurosurgery/specialty_areas/cerebrovascular/conditions/stroke.html


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Research reveals new drug target urgently needed for tuberculosis therapy

2012-12-21
One third of the world is infected with the bacterium that causes tuberculosis (TB), a disease that is increasingly difficult to treat because of wide spread resistance to available drugs. Researchers from the Institute of Pharmacology and Structural Biology (CNRS, Université de Toulouse) in Toulouse (France) have identified a fresh target to develop new drugs for TB. The study, published in the Open Access journal PLOS Pathogens, shows why the target will be important in developing new TB treatments. The deadliest form of human tuberculosis is caused by Mycobacterium ...

Brain imaging insight into cannabis as a pain killer

2012-12-21
The pain relief offered by cannabis varies greatly between individuals, a brain imaging study carried out at the University of Oxford suggests. The researchers found that an oral tablet of THC, the psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, tended to make the experience of pain more bearable, rather than actually reduce the intensity of the pain. MRI brain imaging showed reduced activity in key areas of the brain that substantiated the pain relief the study participants experienced. 'We have revealed new information about the neural basis of cannabis-induced pain relief,' ...

Microevolutionary analysis of Clostridium difficile genomes to investigate transmission

2012-12-21
Over recent years, hospital-acquired Clostridium difficile infections have been a significant problem in UK hospitals and globally. There have been concerns that infections may be due to transmission between symptomatic patients, either directly, or indirectly via hospital staff; these concerns were strengthened when enhanced infection control was introduced in England in 2007, and the incidence of C. difficile infection declined. A recent study published in the open access journal Genome Biology, published by BioMed Central, took a genomics approach to assess the incidence ...

Newborn baby screening for fragile X syndrome

2012-12-21
A study into newborn screening for fragile X syndrome (FXS) demonstrates that testing for mutations in the gene FMR1 can be done on a large scale. The research, published in BioMed Central's open access journal Genome Medicine, shows that the number of carrier babies who carry the form of the gene known as the "premutation" is higher than previously estimated. Three large hospitals in the USA participated in this study, testing more than 14,000 newborns, including children of different ethnic backgrounds. While only one child was identified with the full mutation, the ...

Cancer diagnosis later in life poses significant risk to offspring

2012-12-21
Relatives of family members diagnosed with cancer are still at risk of the disease even if the diagnosis came at an older age, suggests a paper published on bmj.com today. It is known that early onset cancer cases carry more hereditary risk than late onset cases, but little is known about whether any familial component exists in cancer at a very old age. Researchers from the German Cancer Research Centre and Lund University in Sweden therefore took data from the Swedish Family-Cancer Database (the largest one of its kind) on just under eight million offspring and their ...

Genetic differences may influence sensitivity to pain, according to new study

2012-12-21
The study, published in PLOS Genetics on 20 December, adds to growing evidence that particular genes are involved in chronic pain and highlights this pathway as a potential target for more effective pain relief treatments for patients. The collaborative study between King's, Pfizer Ltd and the Beijing Genomics Institute (BGI), used a new method to study and compare DNA, called 'exome sequencing', to identify genetic variations relating to pain sensitivity. Lead author Dr Frances Williams, from the Department of Twin Research and Genetic Epidemiology at King's College ...

New whole plant therapy shows promise as an effective and economical treatment for malaria

New whole plant therapy shows promise as an effective and economical treatment for malaria
2012-12-21
Worcester, Mass. – In the worldwide battle to curtail malaria, one of the most prevalent and deadly infectious diseases of the developing world, drug after drug has fallen by the wayside as the malaria parasite has become resistant to it. Only artemisinin, derived from the sweet wormwood plant, Artemisia annua, remains as an effective treatment, but it is expensive to produce (particularly when combined with other antimalarial medications to make it less prone to resistance) and is frequently in short supply. A new study by scientists at Worcester Polytechnic Institute ...

Genetic defect causing fragile X-related disorders more common than thought

2012-12-21
A single genetic defect on the X chromosome that can result in a wide array of conditions — from learning and emotional difficulties to primary ovarian insufficiency in women and tremors in middle-aged men — occurs at a much greater frequency than previously thought, research led by the UC Davis MIND Institute has found. The research is based on the first large-scale, multi-center newborn screening effort for the defect in the United States, conducted in a group of more than 14,200 male and female infants at three research university medical centers piloting a new infant ...

BGI reports the new findings reveal blood pressure dugs may treat chronic pain

2012-12-21
December 20, 2012, Shenzhen, China – An international team, comprised King's College London, Pfizer, BGI and other organizations, has explored the genetic variation related with pain sensitivity in the normal population, revealing some existing discovery that treatments for high blood pressure may also be used to treat chronic pain in the future. The latest study was published online in the international journal PLoS Genetics. When the pain lasts a long time for six months or longer, it generally called chronic pain, one of the most costly health problems. Chronic pain ...

BGI reports bat genome provides new insights into the evolution of flight and immunity

2012-12-21
December 20, 2012, Shenzhen, China – BGI today announces the online publication in Science of the latest findings through genomic analysis of two distantly related bat species, the Black flying fox (Pteropus alecto) and David's Myotis (Myotis davidii). The work here provides new insight into the genetic mechanisms underlying the evolution of flight and immunity of bats, and also opens the way for addressing major gaps into understanding of bat biology and provides new directions for future research. Bats are often characterized as creepy, disease-carrying, and even blood-sucking ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NIH-led study reveals role of mobile DNA elements in lung cancer progression

Stanford Medicine-led study identifies immune switch critical to autoimmunity, cancer

Research Alert: How the Immune System Stalls Weight Loss

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist use and vertebral fracture risk in type 2 diabetes

Nonadherence to cervical cancer screening guidelines in commercially insured US adults

Contraception and castration linked to longer lifespan

An old jeweler’s trick could unlock next-generation nuclear clocks

Older age, chronic kidney disease and cerebrovascular disease linked with increased risk for paralysis and death after West Nile virus infection

New immune role discovered for specialized gut cells linked to celiac disease

A new ‘hypertropical’ climate is emerging in the Amazon

Integrated piezoelectric vibration and in situ force sensing for low-trauma tissue penetration

Three-hit model describes the causes of autism

Beech trees use seasonal soil moisture to optimize water uptake

How thinning benefits growth for all trees

Researchers upgrades 3-PG forest model for improved accuracy

Achieving anti-thermal-quenching in Tb3+-doped glass scintillators via dual-channel thermally enhanced energy transfer

Liquid metal modified hexagonal boron nitride flakes for efficient electromagnetic wave absorption and thermal management

Failure mechanisms in PEM water electrolyzers

Study captures how cancer cells hide from brain immune cells, shows that removing their “don’t eat me” signals stops their escape

New breakthrough in detecting ‘ghost particles’ from the Sun

Half of people arrested in London may have undiagnosed ADHD, study finds

From dots to lines: new database catalogs human gene types using ’ACTG’ rules

Persistent antibiotic resistance of cholera-causing bacteria in Africa revealed from a multinational workshop for strengthening disease surveillance

SwRI, Trinity University to synthesize novel compound to mitigate effects of stroke, heart attack

Novel endocrine therapy giredestrant improves disease-free survival over standard of care for patients with early-stage breast cancer in phase III lidERA trial

Gen Z views world as "scary place" with growing cynicism about ability to create change

Biosensor performance doubled – New applications possible

Leveraging incomplete remote sensing for forest inventory

Key chemical in dark chocolate may slow down ageing

New 15-minute hepatitis C test paves the way for same-day treatment

[Press-News.org] New MRI analysis useful in predicting stroke complications caused by clot-busters
Johns Hopkins researchers find way to accurately measure blood-brain barrier damage