No mention of how this might work and obviously no mention of possible competing ideas. You fund researchers to test out these 17 possibilities to find out which one is the best. Or maybe the Qualcomm Xprize for the tricorder.
New stroke detection device promises faster diagnosis
An East Liberty startup is planning a clinical trial for a device
that promises to identify strokes much faster than currently possible,
reducing the time needed for patients to get definitive care.
Forest Devices Inc., a year-old company housed within the AlphaLab
Gear business accelerator in East Liberty, will begin enrolling patients
in a feasibility study in late June at West Virginia University
Hospitals, said founder and CEO Matt Kesinger. Twenty patients will be
recruited, split between people with and without a diagnosed stroke to
determine the device’s detection accuracy.
“The average delay in treatment of a stroke if missed on the
ambulance is two hours,” said Mr. Kesinger, a 33-year-old Dallas, Texas,
native. “It’s all about time.”
About 800,000 people have a stroke each year, which happens when a
brain vessel bursts or the blood supply is blocked to part of the brain,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. On
average, one American dies every four minutes from a stroke. Only
hospitals certified as comprehensive stroke centers have
around-the-clock availability of the medical personnel and equipment
needed to treat the most serious strokes.
Definitive treatment can include opening the blocked vessel with a
tiny catheter, a procedure similar to one that has been successfully
done for years in treating people with heart attacks. And like heart
attacks, stroke treatment guidelines recommend that definitive care
begin within an hour of the onset of symptoms, making speed critical in
getting effective treatment.
Stroke diagnosis now hinges on the results of a CAT scan, big devices
that are not readily movable. Instead, Forest Devices uses an EKG-like
band around the forehead to detect brain abnormalities.
“Our vision is to create a device that any emergency medical
technician can use, simpler than an EKG,” Mr. Kesinger said. “We want to
save lives and we want to save tissue.”
Mr. Kesinger is on leave from the University of Pittsburgh Medical
School, where he was a fourth-year student, and he is enrolled in a
master’s program in health care policy and management at Carnegie Mellon
University, where he’s learning the basics of the health care business.
He founded the company last year with Dan Willis, who serves as chief
technology officer, and Steve Morrow, chief business officer.
Mr. Kesinger anticipates Food and Drug Administration approval taking
18 to 24 months and a $3 billion market for the device. Ambulance
services, urgent care centers and hospitals will be primary customers,
he said. The test is virtually risk-free for patients.
Clot-busting medications have been used for years to treat strokes,
but breaking up clots with catheters threaded into the brain is a more
recent innovation that has been helped by equipment advances, said
Ashutosh Jadhav, a physician who is director of stroke services at UPMC
Mercy and Shadyside hospitals. Only last year did studies confirm the
effectiveness of the interventional approach, with three out of five of
those studies involving UPMC researchers.
“We gave this therapy faster than we did in the past,” said Dr.
Jadhav, who was involved in the trials. “The faster you get treatment,
the more likely you are to have a good outcome. This has really changed
how we think about stroke and stroke therapy.”
Faster diagnosis of stroke in the field would allow paramedics to
alert hospitals sooner and have stroke specialists immediately available
when the patient arrives. A similar approach has been used for years in
cases of trauma, which allows specialized teams to be ready when a
severely injured patient arrives.
“We have to move quickly to see the good results,” Dr. Jadhav said.
“The brain is the least forgiving in not receiving enough nutrition.
Time is brain.”
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