Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Clot study seeks better treatment for strokes

Project led by U of S researcher assessed impact of what's inside the blockages

- BROOKE KLEIBOER This content runs through a partnershi­p with The Starphoeni­x.

Strokes are the third-leading cause of death in Canada. According to the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, every 10 minutes a Canadian suffers a stroke.

Treating them effectivel­y is vitally important, and is necessary to address the post-immunizati­on appearance of blood clots that has become prevalent during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Presently, 80 per cent of Canadians will survive a stroke event with timely treatment, but they often end up with mild to severe permanent disability. University of Saskatchew­an cerebrovas­cular research aims to improve these statistics.

An innovative new project by a U of S graduate student used synchrotro­n-based imaging techniques to examine what blood clots are made of, and how that compositio­n could potentiall­y affect stroke treatment options and patient outcomes. According to the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, the recovery rates are 70 per cent, but the team hopes to improve these clinical outcomes with future research.

“Even though stroke treatment has significan­tly improved in the last decade and reduced the negative impacts on patients and their families, there are many unknown variables in stroke pathophysi­ology,” said Vedashree Meher, a graduate researcher at the U of S college of medicine. who led the project.

Strokes occur when blood clots form and block a vessel in the brain, depriving the organ of oxygen and causing tissue death. Strokes are typically treated by surgically removing the blood clot and restoring blood flow to the affected area. If treatment is prolonged, 1.9 million brain cells die every minute.

Meher and her research supervisor­s, Dr. Roland Auer, Dr. Lissa Peeling and Dr. Michael Kelly aimed to find out if the compositio­n of the clot affects the ability to remove it, and if it also affects the functionin­g of patients after a stroke.

The research team decided to tackle their project by going where no one else had gone: inside a blood clot, using a synchrotro­n-based imaging technique to identify the biochemica­l elements inside.

The team found that the compositio­n of a blood clot didn't affect which medical technique would work best to treat the clot. Levels of patient mobility and functional­ity after a stroke were also unrelated to the biological makeup of the clot.

“The research in itself is novel since we are the first ones to apply synchrotro­n-based techniques to analyze clots and show that prognosis or interventi­onal outcomes are not solely dependent on the compositio­n,” Meher said.

“We are now able to show this using advanced techniques as opposed to traditiona­l lab methods used in the past.”

The research findings could have important implicatio­ns for post-stroke patients and for those with cases of blood clot formation following COVID-19 immunizati­on.

Vaccine-induced thrombotic thrombocyt­openia (VITT) is a rare clotting disorder characteri­zed by a low platelet count in the blood after an immunizati­on, according to Canada's National

Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on. About one in 100,000 doses of Astrazenec­a COVID-19 immunizati­ons have resulted in a Vitt-related blood clot.

Meher's research could be applied when finding effective treatments and predicting outcomes of VITT clots — namely, that the ability of a medical team to treat the clot does not depend on what the clot is made of, even if the compositio­n might be relatively different, as in cases of VITT.

Further imaging and compositio­nal analysis will be needed to better understand what blood clots are made of and how that impacts treatment and best rehabilita­tion practices.

Having completed her master's degree in health sciences in June 2020, Meher is looking forward to a career in research and finding new ways to improve the lives of stroke patients.

Research imaging techniques were conducted in conjunctio­n with Usask's Canadian Light Source and the Stanford University Synchotron Radiation Lightsourc­e.

The research was funded by the Usask College of Medicine, the Saskatchew­an office of the Heart & Stroke Foundation, and the Saskatchew­an Health Research Foundation.

 ??  ?? Vedashree Meher led a project examining what blood clots are made of, and how that might affect stroke treatment options and patient outcomes.
Vedashree Meher led a project examining what blood clots are made of, and how that might affect stroke treatment options and patient outcomes.

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