Earlier instructions on nitroglycerin use:
In the book 'Pharmacology for the Ems Provider' issued 2002 - are nitroglycerin instructions for ischemic and hemorrhagic survivors, link below and search for nitroglycerin, page 296-7 contains what your ER doctor is probably interested in. So when in the ER ask your ER doctor what they are doing to prevent neuronal death.
http://books.google.com/books?id=Dhn5ToVru6YC&pg=PA296&lpg=PA296&dq=nitroglycerin+cream+for+stroke+victims.&source=bl&ots=cNFg6USRS9&sig=eBPzFGHL4X0G2CFaA8OBsHF_ylU&hl=en&sa=X&ei=WUNvUJ_HJcHkygGKi4HoCA&ved=0CCIQ6AEwATgK#v=onepage&q=nitroglycerin%20cream%20for%20stroke%20victims.&f=false
A Utah State Stroke System Toolkit below also contains instruction on use. 43 pages. page 30 contains nitro instructions, June, 2010
ReceivingStrokeFacility Toolkit
Skin patch costing 39p could save lives of stroke victims, researchers say - Nitroglycerin
A skin patch costing as little as 39p could revolutionise stroke treatment, significantly increasing the chances of survival, researchers have found.
The patch contains glyceryl trinitrate (GTN), which lowers blood pressure and opens up blood vessels, helping reduce the damage caused in the immediate minutes and hours following a stroke.
A stroke is usually caused by an artery clot or burst blood vessel in the brain and causes permanent disability in about a quarter of patients.
A small trial of 41 randomised patients in and around Nottingham found that administering the patch to a patient’s shoulder or back while they were travelling to hospital halved the stroke death rate from 38% to 16%.
As a result, the British Heart Foundation (BHF) has funded the University of Nottingham researchers to work with seven ambulance services to trial the patch on patients and chart their recovery over 12 months.
Paramedics can administer the patch in the ambulance before arrival in A&E, saving vital time.
Prof Sir Nilesh Samani, the BHF’s medical director, said: “Current treatment for stroke is fairly limited and patients are dying or suffering life-changing disabilities as a result.
“This trial uses a simple patch that can be applied rapidly by paramedics as soon as they reach the patient.
“If successful, this could revolutionise treatment for stroke patients across the UK and potentially globally and could be a huge step forward in the advancement of stroke treatment which currently lags behind heart attack treatment.”
There are more than 100,000 strokes in the UK each year, according to the Stroke Association, and the BHF says 40,000 people die as a result annually, making it the country’s fourth biggest killer. One in eight strokes are fatal in the first 30 days.
The cost to the NHS and social care system is estimated at £2bn a year in England and research has suggested the cost to society as a whole in the UK is £9bn.
Funding for stroke research, which was £56m in 2012, is approximately a tenth of the £544m spent on cancer research. Cancer’s cost to the health and social care system is estimated at £5bn a year.
GTN is used for chest pain associated with angina, but the use of the drug for treating hyperacute stroke is new and the researchers believe they are the only people in the world testing it.
Prof Philip Bath, a BHF researcher from the University of Nottingham, said: “We believe that by improving blood flow in the brain in stroke patients we can dramatically improve their survival chances and recovery.
“This patch enables us to do this within minutes and early trials have been very promising.”
The patch contains glyceryl trinitrate (GTN), which lowers blood pressure and opens up blood vessels, helping reduce the damage caused in the immediate minutes and hours following a stroke.
A stroke is usually caused by an artery clot or burst blood vessel in the brain and causes permanent disability in about a quarter of patients.
A small trial of 41 randomised patients in and around Nottingham found that administering the patch to a patient’s shoulder or back while they were travelling to hospital halved the stroke death rate from 38% to 16%.
As a result, the British Heart Foundation (BHF) has funded the University of Nottingham researchers to work with seven ambulance services to trial the patch on patients and chart their recovery over 12 months.
Paramedics can administer the patch in the ambulance before arrival in A&E, saving vital time.
Prof Sir Nilesh Samani, the BHF’s medical director, said: “Current treatment for stroke is fairly limited and patients are dying or suffering life-changing disabilities as a result.
“This trial uses a simple patch that can be applied rapidly by paramedics as soon as they reach the patient.
“If successful, this could revolutionise treatment for stroke patients across the UK and potentially globally and could be a huge step forward in the advancement of stroke treatment which currently lags behind heart attack treatment.”
There are more than 100,000 strokes in the UK each year, according to the Stroke Association, and the BHF says 40,000 people die as a result annually, making it the country’s fourth biggest killer. One in eight strokes are fatal in the first 30 days.
The cost to the NHS and social care system is estimated at £2bn a year in England and research has suggested the cost to society as a whole in the UK is £9bn.
Funding for stroke research, which was £56m in 2012, is approximately a tenth of the £544m spent on cancer research. Cancer’s cost to the health and social care system is estimated at £5bn a year.
GTN is used for chest pain associated with angina, but the use of the drug for treating hyperacute stroke is new and the researchers believe they are the only people in the world testing it.
Prof Philip Bath, a BHF researcher from the University of Nottingham, said: “We believe that by improving blood flow in the brain in stroke patients we can dramatically improve their survival chances and recovery.
“This patch enables us to do this within minutes and early trials have been very promising.”
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