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Laser therapy promising for milder strokes: studyBy Will Dunham WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An experimental stroke treatment that sends laser beams into the brain may help patients with milder strokes lessen their crippling effects, U.S. researchers said on Friday. Carlsbad, California-based PhotoThera Inc's NeuroThera Laser System failed to significantly lower stroke disability overall in 660 stroke patients in its first major clinical trial, the researchers wrote in the journal Stroke. But patients with moderate to moderately severe strokes did improve after laser treatment, the researchers said. The only treatment approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the most common type of stroke, caused by a blood clot, is a clot-busting drug known as tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA, that must be given intravenously within three hours. Doctors used the laser device to painlessly send low-energy infrared radiation into the brain, on average 14-1/2 hours after a stroke. Among those who had moderate to moderately severe strokes, 52 percent of those given the laser treatment had either mild or no disability compared to 42 percent of the others. That difference was statistically significant, Zivin said. "We're very encouraged by it," added Zivin, whose study was presented at an American Stroke Association meeting. Zivin, who has a financial stake in the company, said it is unclear exactly how the laser treatment may be helping the patient. It's possible the treatment is reducing cell death, increasing new cell growth and boosting energy metabolism. |
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The Neurological Resource Center | 712 Swift Blvd, Suite 1 | Richland, WA 99352 | Phone 509.943.8455 | Fax 509.943.1497 |
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