On a Friday afternoon             
  in October 1997, Earleen Cypress, a retired teacher, was in the kitchen of her           
Baltimore home when she heard a thud. Rushing into the family room, she found             
  her husband sprawled on the carpet.  
            
"Can you hear    
me?" she asked. But Zanes Cypress, a former government worker,             
  was paralyzed and unable to speak.  
            
            
  Earleen immediately called 911, and an ambulance raced the couple toward the             
  University of Maryland Medical Center in downtown Baltimore, a leading stroke-treatment             
  facility. Less than ten minutes after the ambulance arrived, technicians slid             
  Zanes Cypress headfirst into the opening of a             
. During the scan             
  he was diagnosed with a major             
 stroke.
            
            
  A blood clot blocked an artery in the left of Cypress's brain, starving nearby             
  tissue of oxygen. Toxic chemicals from the dying tissue would soon spread to             
  kill more brain cells, resulting in . The entire             
  right side of his body would likely become permanently paralyzed.
            
    But Dr. Marian LaMonte, co-director of the Brain Attack Team, began intravenously             
  administering a drug called tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). Half an hour             
  passed, then she asked Earleen Cypress to come into her husband's room.
            
    Earleen was expecting the worst. But Zanes raised his right arm and leg high             
  over the table. The next afternoon he spoke coherently, and in a few days he             
  was discharged from the hospital in good condition.
            
 
            
Chain of Recovery
            
    Had Zanes Cypress suffered a stroke           
  a few years earlier, the outcome would have been far grimmer, for doctors could           
  have done little to help him.  "The general standard of stroke treatment            
  was to stabilize the patient, then            
  let nature take its course and focus on recovery," explains Dr. Audrey Penn,            
  deputy director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
            
    That has changed, and today there is an exciting group of weapons in the medical            
  arsenal against stroke. While not all "brain attacks" can be treated, clotbusting            
  drugs and surgical techniques can save lives or prevent loss of neurological            
  function. Meanwhile, scientists are testing chemicals to counteract the 
otherwise irreversible self-destruction of brain cells following a stroke.
            
    The need for these therapies is critical. Some 560 000 Americans annually suffer             
  ischemic strokes, while about 140 000 are afflicted with             
 strokes,             
  which are caused by a ruptured vessel in the brain. Someone suffers a brain             
  attack every 53 seconds, and every 3.3 minutes someone dies from one. The annual             
  death toll of 160 000 makes stroke the third-leading killer, after heart disease             
  and cancer.
            
    Strokes are also our leading cause of long-term adult disability. More than             
  four million survivors struggle with problems ranging from impairment of vision             
  or speech to major paralysis and shattered mental ability. The American Heart             
  Association and its new division, the American Stroke Association, estimate             
  the cost of brain attack at more than $45 billion a year.
            
     Unfortunately, only a fraction of stroke victims currently receive the new             
  treatments. Fewer than five percent receive t-PA, for example.  
            
    Why? One reason is that most people,            
  including some members of the medical profession, are still not aware that the            
  damage of a stroke can often be reversed, provided the victim gets immediate            
  care. In the past, people often ignored stroke symptoms for crucial hours            
  or even days after their onset. Many 911 dispatches did not deal with calls            
  about possible strokes as true emergencies. And in many emergency rooms, stroke            
  patients were given low priority.  
            
    To fulfill their potential, the new therapies require that stroke victims reach             
  the hospital, be evaluated, and begin treatment as quickly as possible. The          
clotbuster t-PA, for example, is only safe and effective if administered within             
  three hours of the first symptoms of an ischemic stroke.  
            
    Patients who receive t-PA during that narrow window are at least 30 percent            
  more likely to escape disabling brain damage than those not given the          
clotbuster.            
  But before doctors can safely administer t-PA, the patient must undergo a            
  CAT scan so a radiologist can rule out hemorrhagic brain attack. (The drug            
  cannot be used in a hemorrhagic stroke, because it could aggravate bleeding            
  in the brain.) Researchers are now studying drugs that may offer more options            
  for the immediate treatment of ischemic stroke. And new surgical techniques            
  are also being developed for hemorrhagic strokes.  
            
    Priorities for the care of stroke patients began to change in 1996, when the            
  FDA            
  approved t-Pa. Since then, national organizations have joined in a campaign            
  to fight stroke, offering a model treatment concept that some experts call the            
  Chain of Recovery.  
            
    The Chain begins with potential victims, family members and co-workers learning             
  to recognize the warning signs of stroke. Too many people brush off transient             
  ischemic attacks (TIAs). The symptoms accompanying these so-called mini-strokes             
  may last only a few minutes but often are a warning of an impending major attack.   
             
            
    Unfortunately, fewer than a quarter of our hospitals today have acute stroke             
  teams. When Dr. Mark Alberts, director of Duke University Medical Center's Stroke             
  Acute Care Unit, urges doctors in smaller communities to take stroke treatment             
  seriously, they often say, "I can't leave my busy practice to rush down to the             
  hospital, read a CAT scan and decide whether a patient needs t-PA."  
           
    Alberts counters, "Would you act differently if someone was having a ?" When they answer,    
"Of course," he points out that the ultimate reason             
  for treating cardiac-arrest patients immediately is to prevent brain damage             
  due to interrupted blood flow. "So why shouldn't we take action quickly when             
  a stroke cuts the brain's blood supply?" he asks.  
            
    Communities also need to make sure that the transportation of suspected stroke            
  victims gets a Priority One (critical) status. Currently, only about four to            
  ten percent of stroke victims reach hospital emergency rooms within three hours            
  of their first symptoms. The emergency medical service (EMS) goal should be            
  to deliver brain-attack patients to hospitals within 20 minutes of the 911            
  call.  
            
    The success of Baltimore's brain-attack program, for example, reflects the             
  advanced statewide EMS network in Maryland. Due to the diligence of 911 dispatchers,             
  paramedics, and state-police medevac-chopper crews, stroke victims from as far             
  away as the southern tip of the state, about 100 miles from Baltimore, can reach             
  the medical center less than an hour after their first symptoms. "Patients,             
  the EMS and our staff are now working as a team," notes Dr. LaMonte.  
           
    Medical authorities also recommend that every hospital offering around-the-clock            
  emergency care should have trained stroke-treatment specialists either on duty            
  or on call. Ideally, a patient should be evaluated in the first 15 minutes at            
  the hospital, while laboratory blood analysis is under way. A radiologist should            
  read a CAT head scan within 45 minutes of the patient's arrival. This would            
  ensure "door-to-drug" (t-PA or other treatment) time of 60 minutes following            
  delivery to the hospital.  
           
    Alberts recommends that doctors in private practice and HMOs create community-wide            
  networks to provide smaller hospitals with standby stroke-treatment stall day            
  and night.  
           
  
           
"Drano for the Braino"  
          
    In July 1996, just after the FDA approved the use of t-PA, Woodstock, Va.,            
  internist Dr. Greg Byrd helped colleagues at Shenandoah Memorial Hospital improve            
  their stroke-care capabilities. That same summer they treated their first patient            
  successfully. "Even though we're in a small, rural community," Byrd notes, "our            
  patients are much better protected than in the past."  
          
    In Eugene, Ore., neurologist Dr. Ray Englander led the effort to reconstruct            
  stroke care at Sacred Heart Medical Center. "In 1996 it took us hours to evaluate            
  and treat a stroke victim," Englander notes. "Today a patient goes from initial            
  evaluation to CAT scan and neurological evaluation to treatment in only 45 minutes            
  on average."  
          
    Scared Heart's most famous stroke survivor is , the counterculture             
  novelist. Englander successfully treated Kesey with t-PA after the writer suffered             
  a serious stroke in October 1997. Kesey improved dramatically within days and             
  eventually recovered fully. True to his offbeat manner, he called the clotbuster    
"Drano for the braino."  
           
    Dr. Thomas Brott, chairman of the American Heart Association Stroke Council,             
  urges all "Americans to recognize stroke as a true emergency that has to be             
  treated quickly." Dr. John Marler, who supervised major t-PA research, agrees.    
"If America takes brain attack as seriously as it did heart attack in the '70s,"             
  he predicts, "we can save hundreds of thousands of people from death and disability             
  in coming years."  
           
    Zanes Cypress can attest to that. He has regained almost complete neurological             
  function, including the ability to play guitar. "I feel very thankful that medical             
  science has reached this point," he says. "If people with a stroke like mine             
  act quickly, they, too, may recover."  
           
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