AI helping to save more lives of stroke victims

AI helping to save more lives of stroke victims hinh anh 1A stroke patient survived at HCM City’s People’s Hospital 115 thanks to using the AT software RAPID (Photo: VNA)

HCM City (VNS/VNA) – Thousands of stroke patients hospitalised in ‘s People’s Hospital 115 over the past three years have been saved by
RAPID, an artificial intelligence software.

Nguyen Huy Thang, head of the hospital’s Cerebrovascular Disease Department,
said about 1,000 stroke cases survive each year thanks to using RAPID, instead
of only 400 cases in previous years.

Described as a “hidden killer”, stroke is the third leading cause of
death after cancer and cardiovascular disease in Vietnam. Notably, stroke among
young people has continued to increase in recent years.

In order to improve quality and effectiveness in treatment and care of stroke
patients, since 2019, People’s Hospital 115 was the first hospital in the
country to apply RAPID to take blood clots to treat cerebral infarction for
stroke patients hospitalised after six hours of symptoms.

RAPID, developed by US-based Stanford University, is being used in more than 40
countries around the world.

The “golden” time to treat stroke is in the first six hours from onset, he
said.

Patients who do not recanalide large cerebral blood vessels during this period
are at risk of death or severe disability.

Patients who come to the hospital after six hours could be refused intervention
by the doctor because they could not determine how much the risk area in the
patient’s brain was damaged.

“In addition, removing the blood clots in these cases is both too dangerous and
expensive,” Thang said.

With conventional imaging techniques, the doctor can only see the necrotic
brain parenchyma, but not the brain area that will be dead in the next few
hours.

Seeing the brain area that will be dead is very important to help doctors make
appropriate treatment indications to save the patient’s life, and reduce the
risk of disability.

“RAPID can help to quantify brain lesions. It provides physicians with fast,
fully automated, and easy to interpret imaging,” he said.

“If the patient’s entire brain is necrotic, the patient has no chance of
survival, but if they still have salvageable brain tissue, the doctors will
remove the blood clots to save the patient,” he said.

However, most arrive at the hospital too late to take advantage
of treatment and care. This is one of the main reasons leading to high rate of
deaths and disability caused by stroke.

People’s Hospital 115 recorded around 12% of stroke patients hospitalised in
the first four to five hours after the onset symptoms, 30% of them are
hospitalised after the first six hours, and 60% of them are hospitalised within
24 hours.

Using could help to extend the golden time for medical intervention from
six hours after onset of a stroke to up to 24 hours, Thang said.

“That brings more opportunities to save the lives of a huge number of stroke
patients hospitalised late,” he said.

Each year Vietnam has about 200,000 stroke cases. Although there have been
advanced technologies and modern equipment, the survival rate of stroke cases
is only 50%.

There is evidence that stroke in the young is increasing, especially in
patients under 35 years old.

Stroke is a dangerous acute illness, often occurring suddenly, with a high
death rate if not detected early and treated promptly.

Therefore, it is very important to raise awareness for people to adopt
preventive methods of stroke.

Thang advised that people with hypertension and diabetes are at high risk of a
stroke, and need to monitor their health condition to prevent a possible
stroke.

In addition, people should increase physical activity and limit the use of
alcohol, tobacco and other drugs to prevent the risks of stroke.

If a person has signs of stroke such as weakness on one side of the body,
facial nerve paralysis, headaches, dizziness, vision loss and slurred speech,
they should immediately visit hospitals or health-care facilities to reduce
risks of death and serious complications./.

VNA

Source: VietnamPlus

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

14 Vu Trong Phung, Thanh Xuan, Ha Noi.

Hotline

Hotline

+84365999115

Email Us at

Email Us at

info@herac.org

Contact

Contact

Herac