Updates from March, 2010 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • David 10:13 pm on March 9, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: American Stroke Assoc. Fundraiser, , , , PFO and stroke awareness blog, Tedy's Team Corporate Sponsors   

    Tedy’s Team Corporate Sponsorship Available for Boston Marathon 

    Tedy's Team Corporate Sponsorship Available

    Boston Marathon 2010 Corporate Fundraiser -Tedy\'s Team

    Boston Marathon 2010 Corporate Fundraiser -Tedy\'s Team

    This movie requires Adobe Flash for playback.

    Your corporation, individual brand, or perhaps a special message or product you wish to promote can now be advertised during the 2010 Boston Marathon. (Please note: We’ve made a slight modification from the video demonstration above to improve visibility for corporate advertisers.  The corporate ad placement will be on the back of the actual running singlet as shown in picture below vs. the front and back shoulders on the long sleeve shirt shown in video .)

    Click for my stroke awareness progress report and corporate donation sponsor form for the Boston Marathon here:

    2010 Tedy’s Team Corporate Sponsor (Boston Marathon)


    Corporate Sponsors can Receive Ad Placement at the Stoke Winner and Champion Giving Levels

    Your tax deductible corporate donation can help me continue to reach my stroke awareness goals and help my sister cross the finish line in Boston 2010!

    Click to DONATE NOW online!

    Print and mail in your donation

    If you missed my last video post on why I still need your help to spread stroke awareness please click here to play that video message.

    Thank You!

    David Dansereau for know-stroke.org

     
  • David 1:51 am on February 28, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: aspirin therapy, david dansereau and pfo studies, pfo closure and coumadin   

    Coumadin-Aspirin-or PFO closure to prevent stroke? 

    What’s  the best choice??

    David P Dansereau for know-stroke.org

    I know I have my own opinions and if you’ve read my stroke story you know how I feel about this topic.  Anyway, I found a great presentation recently on  the “Evidence base for PFO closure” by Dr.  Ted Feldman  PDec8Feldman1510 but have been a bit slow at posting lately.

    Here’s the link to the presentation which reviews the use of coumadin, aspirin therapy or PFO closure for stroke prevention

     
    • cory miller 9:53 pm on April 8, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Hi David,

      Have you heard of anyone having bruising over the heart area a few days/week following a PFO closure through a cardiac cath? I see a bunch of references about bruising at the groin site, but not in the chest area. Any input would be greatly appreciated. Thanks :)

  • David 3:34 am on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , pediatric stroke, pfo and stroke blog, stroke awareness in kids   

    Pediatric strokes often take too much time to diagnose 

    “Slurred speech, droopy left eye, stiffness, a sudden inability to walk or even stand on his own: if an adult had come into an emergency room with similar symptoms, the staff might have quickly picked up these classic signs of stroke.”  But this patient’s name is Jared and he was 7 when he had his stroke.  Read Jared’s story from Star News Online as reported by JONATHAN DIENST/ Published: Tuesday, January 19, 2010

    Consider these brief facts:

    (from the full story if you don’t have time to read more about Jared right now:)

    “The rate of pediatric strokes has been growing in recent years, partly as a result of increased awareness and better reporting. Experts at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia estimate that the rate in children under 18 is as high as 12 per 100,000, or about 9,000 incidents a year. And in newborns, they put it at 25 per 100,000 — a rate approaching that of elderly adults.”

    “Time is brain,” doctors like to say, when it comes to treating stroke victims. Yet in pediatric stroke cases, studies show the average diagnosis does not take place until more than 24 hours after the onset of symptoms.”

    __________________________________________________

    Too often, experts say, a stroke in a child will be missed. It is in part why Jared agreed to let his father share this story.

     
  • David 8:44 pm on December 3, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , insurance coverage for PFO closure, percutaneous closure of PFO, stroke survivor stories   

    Crack a chest vs. close a PFO percutaneously- should insurance decide?? 

    Many stroke survivors report they are “waiting in fear for another possible stroke” while insurance companies deny treatment.   This is by far the most common emotion that most stroke survivors share with me while they angrily battle their insurance companies.  Here’s another recent post to know-stroke.org that illustrates this frustration…

    Jen writes- “So I am in a very similar boat. Although, I am only 21, and had a ‘stroke’ this summer. Lucky for me the clot that could have been a full blown stroke happened to end up in my eye instead, killing 1/4th of my left eye but leaving my brain alone. They found my PFO 2 weeks later, and were shocked I had never had migraines. Although looking back I always had, but they affected my eyes more than my head so I never thought they were the same thing as the headaches that kept my sister home in the dark all day long. But three months ago (1.5 months after the clot) I started with the every day full fledged migraines. Fun stuff. Anyway, I have been fighting to get my insurance company to cover the closure for over 3 months now. They refused the device closure 3 times, and it looks like I am going to have some sort of surgery, possibly open heart surgery, on the 21st of december (when the semester is over). To tell you the truth, it is absolutely terrifying, and I can’t understand why they won’t pay to put the device in my heart, but would prefer to cut open my breastbone. I am glad to hear your closure did in fact reduce the symptoms.  My worst fear is to have open heart surgery and be laid up for 6 weeks only to still have the headaches and heart palpitations.”

    We need to do MORE!

     
    • Joe 2:26 am on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      David-it’s been a few months since we spoke on the phone. You were an incredible help and really helped push me in the right direction. We took a similar path which I find ironic and I’m happy to report things are progressing with my PFO closure. Been up in Boston getting some great care. It’s been a long road waiting for appt., MRI’s, ultrasounds, blood tests. After all the work ups, nothing was ever found. No blood clots, no high cholest., no blood disorders, no clots…my TIA is explainable and the doc’s tell me we’ll never really know what caused my double vision that September morning.
      The only things that can be dedected are the two strokes on the brain MRI report that showed I indeed had two strokes. The first one I wasn’t aware of but thinking back, over the years, I think I narrowed it down.
      Just got word this week that my PFO closure is set for next week. I can’t wait. I’m feeling pretty good since my Sept. stroke but having another is always in the back of my mind. Got two young kids and a lot of life to live and the doc’s seem to think after the closure, I’ll be able to put the last 4 months behind me.
      Still can’t believe I had a stroke. Just doesn’t sound right coming from a 35 year old.
      I’ll update you after the procedure.

      Joe

      • David 2:46 am on January 22, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        Joe- That is great news! Thanks so much for commenting and I look forward to your next update.
        Best regards,
        David

      • Sheila 5:28 pm on February 15, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        Hello Joe, happy to read things have worked out for you in Boston. I live in NH and on Feb. 3, 2010 I suffered a stroke. I acted quickly and called 911. After 3 days in the hospital they did a TEE and found I have PFO. My doctor wants me to go to Boston for a consultation. May I ask which Boston Hospital you had your procedure at? So glad I found this info from you, it’s really healpful to others in the same situation. Thank you Joe and keep up the good work getting your message out.
        Sheila

    • joe 2:37 am on January 29, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Had my PFO closed two days ago. I’m feeling pretty good. As you all can imagine the actual day was pretty stressful. I didn’t end up having a TEE during the procedure. Actually had two cathetars on each side of the groin. That’s what’s causing the most discomfort as I recover but very barably. I was awake the whole precedure but didn’t feel anything. I’m amazed by the entire procedure. Now for the follow ups. Dr.’s seem pretty confident the repair was a success but as you know, the 6 month Echo tells the story if the hole is 100% closed. I’m feeling good and looking forward to moving on with life.

    • David Dansereau 5:50 pm on January 29, 2010 Permalink | Reply

      Joe;
      That’s great!! Once again,thanks for sharing your story. Would you mind commenting on why the second cathetar/both sides of groin were used and …wait…. you remember the whole procedure? WoW! You are the 1st person to report being able to recall the actual procedure. New technique or unique situation?? Would you mind sharing once more for my continued PFO education as well as for my readers. THANKS!

      Rest up my friend (no marathons for you just yet!) I’m sure you are glad to have this behind you.

      Best Regards,
      David Dansereau
      know-stroke.org

      • joe 12:01 am on January 30, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        2nd Cathetar was used to guide the device and confirm size of PFo and placement. Rather than do a TEE, they said this 2nd cathetar would be be used instead. Having a TEE prior, I wasn’t going to argue. The numbing solution alone is brutal.
        Since there was no TEE, the meds didn’t have to be as strong. I was able to see the dr feeding the guidewires thru the cathetars if I lifted my head up. This wasn’t too comfortable so I didn’t do it often. I also caught the x ray monitor with the guide wire. I thought it was odd that I was able to see all this stuff as I expected to be out cold. I told the dr. but he didn’t seem to be concerned. The good thing and most important was that I felt very little. I felt the pricks for the numbing meds for the cathetars and nothing else.

      • joe 4:21 pm on January 30, 2010 Permalink | Reply

        The 2nd Cathetar was used in place of the TEE. I know…I was a bit suprised about this method as well. Meant I didn’t have to have a full dose of meds, which I’m guessing why I wasn’t totally knocked out.

  • David 8:07 pm on November 13, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , pfo and exercise, stroke ezine, , therapeutic exercise and stroke   

    Do you get my Health-E-News Ezine with tips for stroke survivors? 

    Why not? It’s free and full of diet reviews,tips to boost your nutrition IQ, and a quack list of products to avoid! In addition it provides quick therapeutic exercises suggestions related to your condition. You’ll also be granted a free access pass to my webinars on timely stroke rehabilitation and technology topics of interest. As a bonus, get free access to back issues with links to hundreds of my training and rehab articles. Don’t miss out-it will not be free forever… Get it now!

     

     
  • David 10:54 am on November 7, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: birth defect, headaches and stroke, merci retriever, , PFO and David Dansereau, ,   

    Another stroke survivor/PFO story 

    This is the original article from Readers’s Digest Race Against Time that I referenced in my PFO story. The archive was down for some time but here once again is the entire article. Well worth the read as it goes over new technology now available to repair / remove damage from stroke, but you have to recognize stroke symptoms and act fast to get help ASAP.

    __________________________________________________

    Traci Miller woke up to the sound of quick footsteps scampering toward her room. It was shortly before dawn on a rainy Saturday in April 2006, but her three-year-old daughter, Alexis, was up unusually early. Traci tucked the toddler back in bed, then checked on one-year-old Rylee, who was sound asleep in her crib. It would be nice to slide under the covers for a few more minutes. But the redheaded mom from Hacketstown, New Jersey, had a busy day planned. She and her husband, Michael, had an appointment with a real estate agent to look at larger houses for their growing family, and her parents would be visiting later in the day. “I’m going to take a shower,” she told Michael, who was still dozing. “I’ve stuff to do before Mom and Dad get here — and we need groceries too.”

    Seconds later, Michael heard a thud. He didn’t know it, but a desperate race against time had just begun. He leapt out of bed to see what was wrong. In the bathroom, he found his wife of five years slumped against the tub. “I was screaming her name and asking if she was okay, but she just stared straight ahead and didn’t answer,” says the 36-year-old civil engineer. “She was moaning, kind of crying. I was terrified.” He carried her to their bed, then dialed 911. During the call, he noticed that Traci couldn’t move her right leg. “That scared me even more.”

    Within minutes, police rushed in with their radios blaring. Since Traci couldn’t talk, they asked Michael what had happened. “Maybe she hit her head and got a concussion,” he replied. Before long, the bedroom was full of paramedics, who examined Traci, slipped a brace around her neck, and loaded her onto a stretcher. During the wait for the ambulance, which was delayed on another call, Michael asked a neighbor to come over and watch the kids until he could reach relatives. Amazingly, baby Rylee slept through the commotion, and Alexis played quietly in bed, unaware of the emergency.

    By the time the ambulance finally arrived, Michael was frantic. The right side of Traci’s face had developed an alarming droop, and her mouth hung open. She was raced to a local hospital, then airlifted to a trauma center in Morristown, New Jersey. “I knew they wouldn’t do that unless her condition was very serious,” says Michael, who followed in his car. “I was crying as I drove. How could she have hurt herself so badly slipping in the bathroom? I panicked to the point that I thought about losing my wife, and our girls growing up without their mother.”

    When Michael reached Morristown Memorial Hospital at 7:40 a.m., he tried to get his emotions under control. During a brief visit with Traci, who was paralyzed on the right side of her body, he discovered that she could communicate with head motions. “Did you fall?” he asked. She nodded yes. “Do you remember how you fell?” She shook her head no. Then she was wheeled off for tests, including a CAT scan, while Michael prayed in the waiting room and called home to check on the kids.

    Nearly an hour later, ER doctors returned with shocking news: Traci had suffered a stroke — loss of blood flow to part of the brain, usually caused when a vessel is blocked by a clot. Michael couldn’t believe it. How could this have happened? His wife, a slim, physically fit nonsmoker, was only 35. His mind raced from one terrifying scenario to another. One of his relatives had a stroke and was never the same afterward. Would that happen to Traci? Would she ever walk or talk again? Was she going to die? Strokes kill more than 157,000 Americans a year, about 60 percent of them women. Survivors can be left with paralysis, impaired vision, chronic pain, difficulty speaking, or cognitive or emotional problems.

    The neurologist explained that it might be possible to reverse the stroke. But it all depended on whether Traci could be treated in time. The longer her brain went without blood flow, the greater the damage. Before the doctors could do anything, they needed to pinpoint when the symptoms started. There are only two FDA-approved therapies for stroke, and both had to be given within strict time limits. Michael hadn’t looked at a clock, but his best guess was that she was stricken at around 6 a.m., or possibly a little later.

    Sparing Death With the Merci Retriever

    The specialist checked his watch. It was 8:45 a.m. There were just minutes left to administer tPA (tissue plasminogen activator), a clot-busting drug that’s only approved for use within three hours of a stroke. But the doctor worried that the clot in Traci’s brain was too big to dissolve with tPA. If it didn’t work, she’d be left profoundly disabled, if she survived at all. Up to 50 percent of people with a blockage where Traci’s was die.

    Traci also qualified for a newer procedure, then offered at only one facility in her state: Overlook Hospital, in Summit, New Jersey. A corkscrew-like device called the Merci Retriever (FDA approved in August 2004) is designed to pluck clots out of blocked vessels like corks from wine bottles. It’s more beneficial than tPA for large blockages and works for up to eight hours after a stroke, says Ronald Benitez, MD, Overlook’s director of endovascular neurosurgery. “Expanding the treatment window means many more patients will be spared death or disability, since most people don’t get to the hospital in time for tPA.”

    The Merci treatment has serious risks, including punctured blood vessels (brain hemorrhaging), which could worsen the stroke or even be fatal. And since the hospital had recently acquired the device, Traci would be only the second patient in New Jersey to undergo the procedure, which is 54 to 69 percent effective at restoring blood flow, according to a 2006 study at University of California, San Francisco. Faced with a life-or-death decision, and a ticking clock, Michael didn’t hesitate. Scrawling his signature on a consent form, he shouted, “What are you waiting for? Let’s get her moved to the other hospital!”

    While doctors scrambled to make the arrangements, Michael called Traci’s parents. “I hoped I’d made the right decision,” he says. “I would have agreed to anything if it gave Traci a better chance at getting back to normal. She didn’t seem to be suffering, but when the doctor asked her to stick out her tongue, she couldn’t even do that.” Michael sped to Overlook Hospital so fast that he actually beat the ambulance there. When Traci arrived, about 10 a.m., he kissed her and promised that the surgeons would help her. “I must have said ‘I love you’ a hundred times before they pulled me away. I was bawling my head off.”

    Four and a half hours after the stroke began, Traci was put under general anesthesia. Dr. Benitez threaded a tiny tube into an artery in her leg. Using x-ray images as a digital road map, he navigated through a maze of blood vessels to her brain. When he reached the blocked vessel, he squirted tPA directly into the clot, a still experimental use of the drug. “That loosens the clot up so it’s easier to extract,” the surgeon explains. The next step was inserting the Merci Retriever into the tube. The Retriever is a flexible wire made of metals that have “memory.” When the nickel and titanium tip comes out the other end of the tube, it “remembers” to curl into a corkscrew. If all goes well, it snares the blockage when pulled back through it.

    But Dr. Benitez’s first attempt only captured a few fragments — just enough to start a trickle of blood through the obstructed vessel, like water spilling from a leaky dam. Not good enough. The process was carefully repeated. “Traci’s being so young and having two kids added to the urgency,” Dr. Benitez says. The device was slowly extracted. To the doctor’s relief, a huge clot was tangled in its coils. X-rays showed blood surging through the vessel at the normal rate. Two much smaller vessels, though, were still clogged. Dr. Benitez squirted in more tPA and they slowly regained flow, except in one tiny area. He’d done all he could to bring her back.

    Soon after the 90-minute procedure, Traci could wiggle her right leg. When she saw Michael in the recovery room, around 1 p.m., her first words were, “I love you.” He was amazed and ecstatic. It seemed like a miracle that she could speak so soon after the procedure. She was moved to the neurology ICU, where several anxious relatives were waiting to see her. A nurse explained after such a severe stroke, they’d have to monitor Traci’s progress one day at a time. It was too soon to predict whether she’d regain all of her former abilities, even with extensive rehabilitation. Michael sat at his wife’s bedside, holding her hand. “You’re going to be just fine,” he promised. “You’re a fighter and can overcome this.” Traci nodded slowly, then drifted off to sleep.

    Bringing Back Traci

    Over the next 24 hours, he rejoiced at each new milestone. Although her speech was soft and slurred, she whispered simple words, such as “yes,” “no” and “hi.” She also recognized friends and relatives who dropped by, and even greeted her brother-in-law by his nickname, “Dupe.” On Sunday afternoon, a day and a half after the stroke, she took her first steps, with the aid of a walker. “I was very excited, relieved and hopeful,” says Michael. Even though Traci seemed dazed, and had limited use of her right arm, he was convinced that over time, she’d recover 100 percent.

    The next day, however, there was a setback. When a doctor checked her vision, she didn’t react when he shone a flashlight into her left eye. “I was devastated that I couldn’t see on that side,” says Traci, who was struggling to understand what had happened to her. “I didn’t get the whole stroke thing, or why something was wrong with my left eye, when the other problems were on the right side of my body.” The doctor thought that a fragment of the clot might have blocked flow to a vessel in that eye during the stroke, but he held out hope that her vision might eventually return. By the end of the week, she could see shadows.

    She graduated from a walker to a cane, and began to speak in complete sentences. “I’m going to be okay,” she told her parents. They were helping Michael care for the kids. Rylee was too young to talk, but Alexis kept asking to see her mom. She had to wait until Traci was moved from the ICU to a regular hospital room. Before the visit, Michael explained that Traci used Play-Doh to exercise her hand. Alexis rifled through her toy box until she found a container of pink Play-Doh, the little girl’s favorite color. “This will help Mommy get better,” she proclaimed. Traci was so happy to see the children that she burst into tears, then put Alexis in her lap while they squeezed and molded the Play-Doh together.

    After a week, Traci was transferred to a rehabilitation center, where she received physical, occupational and speech therapies. Two weeks after the stroke, she was well enough to go home and begin outpatient treatment. Before long, she was walking without a cane, though her right foot dragged, causing her to stumble frequently. She gradually learned to walk normally, and her right arm gained greater strength and flexibility, though it remains weaker than the left. Learning to write again was a struggle. At first, she could barely print her name, but eventually, her penmanship was nearly perfect.

    As her physical skills returned, her thinking also got sharper. “About four weeks after the stroke, it finally hit me how serious this was. I wanted to know, Why me?” Tests revealed a previously undiagnosed birth defect: a small hole in her heart that made her more prone to stroke. However, doctors decided to postpone repair until she was further along with her recovery. Meanwhile, sight gradually returned to her left eye, though her vision is blurry on that side. She fumbles for a word occasionally but has no other speech problems.

    In early July, she returned to her job at a pharmaceutical company. “I’m amazed that I had a 50-50 chance of dying, but I’m still here,” says Traci, who had a cardiac repair operation in September. She’s also had an emotional change of heart. “I’ve cut back on my hours at work, and I take more vacations. My life is here at home with my girls and my husband, and I want to enjoy it to the fullest.”

     
  • David 8:05 pm on November 4, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , ,   

    Wonder what A Migraine looks like? 

    Stroke/PFO Connection and MY Oprah Challenge by David Dansereau

    Stroke/PFO Connection and MY Oprah Challenge by David Dansereau

    This movie requires Adobe Flash for playback.

     
  • David 2:13 am on October 24, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: brian mullen, jr richard, PFO and stroke/migraines, , young athletes and stroke   

    Strokes suffered by young people in the past may have been “underdiagnosed and underappreciated” 

    This article by Robbie Neiswanger from THE MORNING NEWS
    IN RAZORBACK CENTRAL

    Athletes Not Immune To Strokes
    Arkansas Receiver On The Recovery Trail

    LAST UPDATED FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2009 7:16 PM CDT

    FAYETTEVILLE — Something was wrong with Brian Mullen.

    The professional hockey player didn’t feel right that August day in 1993. His keys unusually fell out of his hands several times. He was stumbling around, too, for unknown reasons. And he had trouble speaking, slurring his words.

    Mullen, who was playing in the NHL for the New York Islanders, was in his early 30s. He was in great shape, preparing for his 12th season in the league. So he wasn’t exactly expecting what doctors eventually told him.

    How could he have suffered a stroke?

    Read the full article

     
  • David 3:32 am on October 3, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

     
  • David 1:58 pm on May 6, 2009 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , stroke resources   

    Know Stroke. Know the Signs. Act in Time. 

    May is National Stroke Awareness Month.  Know all your risks by watching this video from  the National Institute of Health’s Stroke Awareness site

     
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