Popular Articles

Biovail Receives 2009 Corporate Award From National Organization For Rare Disorders
Biovail Corporation (NYSE: BVF)(TSX: BVF) announced that the Company has received the 2009 Corporate Award from the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD) for the development of Xenazine® for the treatment of chorea in association with Huntington"s disease. The Award was presented last night at NORD"s Partners in Progress Gala in Washington D.C.

People Who Bike Or Walk To Work Are More Fit, Less Fat Than Drivers
Trying to get fit but can"t work it into your daily schedule? Incorporating even relatively short bouts of exercise into a daily commute appears to deliver significant rewards, according to a new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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When A Dog Bites
A pet bites a child, and the owner is faced with an excruciating decision: Is it safe to keep this dog?
Medical Devices

New Invention To Fight Strokes

A revolutionary new device which could save the lives of stroke patients has been developed by a University of Wolverhampton expert. Dr Gillian Pearce is one of the inventors of a blood clot removal device which could improve the survival rates of people who have suffered a stroke. There are 130,000 strokes per year in the UK alone, and millions worldwide. The mainstay of treatment in the last three to four years has been to dissolve the clot using a drug called tPA (alteplase). But the drug is only licensed for use within three hours after the stroke has occurred and it cannot be given to everyone. An alternative to breaking down the clot is to remove it by mechanical extraction devices. Dr Pearce and her colleague Reverend Neil Perkinson have invented the GP Mechanical Thrombectomy Device (MTD) to undertake such clot removal. Apparatus that mimics the human circulatory system has been used to test the GP MTD. Dr Pearce, Senior Lecturer in Biomedical Sciences, said: "The statistical data collected using repeated tests has shown that this novel device is highly effective in blood clot extraction. Larger versions of this device may be used to remove blood clots in the heart and in the peripheral vascular system, for example for clots in the legs." This initial testing was undertaken by a medical student working with Dr Pearce. Further independent testing of the device will now take place. The device can be used for thromboembolic strokes, which are caused by the interruption of blood flow to a part of the brain due to the formation of a blood clot in an artery. University of Wolverhampton


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