The Week

Hope for stroke victims

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A “game-changing” stroke treatment is to become available to thousands more people, NHS England announced this week. Mechanical thrombecto­mies are used to remove blood clots in the brains of patients who have had acute ischaemic strokes. The procedure involves feeding a wire up through the body, usually from the groin area, where a wire mesh tube then catches the clot so that it can be dragged out, and blood flow is restored – limiting the damage to the brain. If used quickly enough, the procedure is more effective at unblocking arteries than blood-thinning drugs – and greatly improves patients’ chances of making a full recovery. At the moment, thrombecto­mies are offered in only a handful of hospitals, but there are plans to expand their availabili­ty to 24 specialist centres, starting this year. Eventually, 8,000 stroke patients a year could be treated with thrombecto­mies.

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