Use the labels in the right column to find what you want. Or you can go thru them one by one, there are only 29,960 posts. Searching is done in the search box in upper left corner. I blog on anything to do with stroke. DO NOT DO ANYTHING SUGGESTED HERE AS I AM NOT MEDICALLY TRAINED, YOUR DOCTOR IS, LISTEN TO THEM. BUT I BET THEY DON'T KNOW HOW TO GET YOU 100% RECOVERED. I DON'T EITHER BUT HAVE PLENTY OF QUESTIONS FOR YOUR DOCTOR TO ANSWER.
What this blog is for:
My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Tuesday, March 18, 2025
Kauvery Hospital Awarded Diamond Status for Excellence in Stroke Care by World Stroke Organisation
This is the whole problem in stroke enumerated in one word; 'care'; NOT RECOVERY! I consider the WSO a complete failure for not even trying to solve stroke to 100% recovery!
YOU have to get involved and change this failure mindset of 'care' to 100% RECOVERY! Survivors want RECOVERY, NOT 'CARE'!
ASK SURVIVORS WHAT THEY WANT, THEY'LL NEVER RESPOND 'CARE'! This tyranny of low expectations has to be completely rooted out of any stroke conversation!
RECOVERY IS THE ONLY GOAL IN STROKE! GET THERE!
Kauvery Hospital Awarded Diamond Status for Excellence in Stroke Care by World Stroke Organisation
VMPL
Trichy (Tamil Nadu) [India], March 18: Dr.D.Senguttavan, Co Founder & Executive Director Kauvery Hospital Trichy is proud to announce that Kauvery Hospital Trichy has been awarded the prestigious Diamond Status by the World Stroke Organisation (WSO) for its exceptional quality in stroke careNOT RECOVERY!) in Abu Dhabi. This recognition highlights the hospital's commitment to providing world-class careNOT RECOVERY!) for stroke patients through advanced treatment methods, timely interventions, and state-of-the-art facilities.
The WSO's Diamond Status is granted to healthcare institutions that consistently demonstrate the highest standards of clinical careNOT RECOVERY!), patient outcomes, and comprehensive stroke management. Kauvery Hospital's multidisciplinary approach, innovative stroke careNOT RECOVERY!) protocols, and ongoing education of medical staff have played a significant role in achieving this esteemed honor.
"We are deeply honored to receive the Diamond Status from the World Stroke Organisation. This achievement is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our team, who are committed to providing the best possible outcomes for stroke patients," said Dr. Jos Jasper, Head Brain & Spine Surgery at Kauvery Hospital. "Our patients' health and well-being remain our top priority, and this recognition motivates us to continue advancing the standards of stroke careNOT RECOVERY!)."
The World Stroke Organization's award acknowledges Kauvery Hospital's leadership in managing stroke patients, offering timely interventions, and improving overall survival and recovery rates. This recognition further solidifies Kauvery Hospital as a beacon of excellence in stroke careNOT RECOVERY!) across the region.
Kauvery Hospital continues to set new benchmarks in healthcare, leveraging cutting-edge medical technology and a patient-centered approach to improve health outcomes and quality of life for stroke patients.
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Stroke Care in Rural Settings: An AHA Scientific Statement
This is how bad the AHA/ASA is: 'care' NOT RECOVERY! Which is why they are the prime example of a fucking failure of a stroke association along with the WSO. The whole statement is a great example of excuses, excuses, excuses! I'd fire everybody involved in this crapola!
Send me hate mail on this: oc1dean@gmail.com. I'll print your complete statement with your name and my response in my blog. Or are you afraid to engage with my stroke-addled mind? No excuses are allowed! You're medically trained; it should be simple to precisely refute all my points with NO EXCUSES!! Your definition of competence in stroke is obviously much lower than stroke survivors' definition of your competence! Swearing at me is allowed, I'll return the favor. Don't even attempt to use the excuse that brain research is hard.
Stroke Care in Rural Settings: An AHA Scientific Statement
Strategic interventions and investments are needed to improve stroke care in rural areas, according to a scientific statement from the American Heart Association (AHA) published in Stroke.
The AHA statement addresses potential solutions for monitoring and improving the performance and delivery of prehospital, acute, and postacute rural stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!).
In the prehospital setting, the patients’ distance from stroke-capable hospitals may delay reperfusion and definitive care(NOT RECOVERY!), and effective strategies may include supporting the hospitals’ transition to certified Acute Stroke Ready Hospital (ASRH) and stroke centers and use of air transport. Individuals in rural areas are less likely to arrive by emergency medical services (EMS) for stroke, and improved ambulance availability is needed in rural settings.
The use of prehospital telemedicine and smartphone applications and artificial intelligence also may enhance stroke detection. Challenges in the emergency department for stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) in lower-resource rural settings may lead to decreased use of thrombolysis, and some rural areas are lacking board-certified emergency medicine physicians. Telestroke use may support improved educational and communication efforts, according to the AHA writing group.
Rural and under-resourced settings are associated with challenges to timely access to high-quality mechanical thrombectomy. Developing a live map for EMS and hospitals with the location of available thrombectomy-capable centers, including traffic and weather conditions and operator availability, may be beneficial, noted the AHA group. Early identification of large vessel occlusion stroke should be combined with tertiary sites, including the transfer process, according to the researchers.
Improving door-in-door-out times for transferred patients to ensure timely thrombectomy includes strategies such as transfer agreements with receiving hospitals and transferring ambulances. In addition, centralized image sharing with the receiving hospital also may enhance workflow, and air transportation should be considered in remote settings with longer distances.
Performance gaps exist between rural and urban hospitals regarding stroke quality measures such as stroke education. Telestroke can improve access to neurologic expertise and is associated with an increase in thrombolytic therapy and improved patient outcomes. Rural hospitals also may invest in annual comprehensive stroke education programs, partner with certified stroke centers, and use stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) coordinators and nurse navigators.
Postacute care(NOT RECOVERY!) is challenging for rural, lower-resourced areas. For patients discharged to home, transitional stroke clinics could help bridge the gap between acute hospitalization and discharge, but would need to account for accessibility and travel distances, the AHA group noted. Home-based interventions, such as blood pressure monitoring and telerehabilitation, virtual support groups, and additional online support, may be beneficial for stroke survivors in rural settings. Expansion of ASRH or Primary Stroke Centers in rural areas needs to be geographically efficient, considering population density and proximity of resources and incentivizing strategies to optimize population coverage.
Overall, patients in rural areas are an underserved population vulnerable to inefficient care(NOT RECOVERY!) and poor outcomes, and policies must address specific workforce shortages. In addition, many barriers regarding health and outcomes in rural communities are associated with social determinants of health, economic opportunity, and community. Integrating rural care(NOT RECOVERY!) systems among various disciplines may lead to more effective advocacy for systematic investments in shared resources, the group noted.
“Related efforts and policy interventions should be directed to enhance public awareness, impart staff training, build stroke infrastructure, enhance access to clinical expertise, streamline data management, and implement quality assessment and improvement programs taking into account the challenges and needs of the rural setting,” the AHA writing group wrote.
Saturday, November 2, 2024
World Stroke Organization Launches Global Coalition to Drive Action on Stroke Care
'Care' is NOT what survivors want, so first you have to set the right goals for the WSO! Professor Jeyaraj Pandian you can reach me at oc1dean@gmail.com and we can discuss a strategy to get to 100% recovery. You do have stroke in your name, so I assume you want to get stroke solved to 100% recovery as all survivors want? You'll want 100% recovery when you are the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke so we better start solving it now!
World Stroke Organization Launches Global Coalition to Drive Action on Stroke Care
Over the past three decades, the global burden of
stroke has doubled. Stroke’s impact is expected to increase by
one-third by 2050
Over the past three decades, the global burden of stroke has doubled. Stroke’s impact is expected to increase by one-third by 2050
OdishaPlus Bureau
On World Stroke Day 2024, the World Stroke Organization (WSO) announces the launch of a global coalition aimed at accelerating policy action on stroke—now the second leading cause of death and the third leading cause of disability worldwide.
World Stroke Organization (WSO), the global body advocating on stroke prevention and management made the announcement at Geneva through a media release.
Over the past three decades, the global burden of stroke has doubled. Stroke’s impact is expected to increase by one-third by 2050. This rise could result in 9.7 million annual deaths and a significant increase in those affected by stroke-related disabilities. Beyond the immense human toll, stroke is projected to cost the global economy over USD 1.6 trillion annually by 2050.
“There is a clear misperception of stroke as an unavoidable, age-related condition with limited treatment options,(But this is absolutely true! No treatments even minimally close to 100% recovery! Send me a response at oc1dean@gmail.com Professor Jeyaraj Pandian and we can discuss a strategy to get stroke 100% recovered!)
” said incoming WSO President, Professor Jeyaraj Pandian. “Evidence shows that stroke is increasingly affecting younger populations, with 80% of all cases preventable. Expanding access to latest acute treatments – which only 5% of eligible patients currently access – can transform patient outcomes, while specialist rehabilitation and long-term support enhance recovery and social reintegration. Not only is stroke largely preventable, but it is also treatable and recoverable.”
In September 2025, Heads of State, Ministers of Health and Finance, and development stakeholders will convene in New York for the fourth UN High-Level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs). With only five years remaining to SDG 3.4 on reducing premature mortality from NCDs, this gathering presents a critical opportunity to drive commitment to policy interventions and investment in stroke prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation.
‘Around the world we can see the huge gaps in stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) at every stage in the patient care(NOT RECOVERY!) pathway. Each of these gaps represents enormous potential for progress. Action on stroke really is the key to accelerating progress on health and development goals.’ said Prof Sheila Martins, co-Chair of the Coalition. ‘WSO’s network of global and national experts stand ready to support governments develop and implement stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) systems that will help reduce their burden of disease.’
The stroke advocacy coalition, comprising health and scientific, patient organizations, and industry leaders, is united in its mission to drive engagement with decision-makers at all levels ahead of the 2025 UN meeting. Current members include the Asia Pacific Stroke Organization, American Stroke Association, European Stroke Organization, Heart and Stroke Foundation South Africa, March of Dimes Canada, and Stroke Association UK. Industry partners Bayer, Boehringer Ingelheim, Ipsen, Philips, and Medtronic have also pledged their support.
(Courtesy: World Stroke Organization)
Friday, November 1, 2024
World Stroke Congress 2024 Session Report: “Borderline Indications in Stroke Thrombolysis”
Notice that NOTHING HERE IS ABOUT GETTING SURVIVORS 100% RECOVERED! That is how fucking useless the WSO is! Thrombolysis is only the first step in stroke treatment, they seem to have no clue that by not stopping the 5 causes of the neuronal cascade of death in the first week thus letting hundreds of millions to billions of neurons die. That just proves the complete incompetence of the WSO!
Send me hate mail on this: oc1dean@gmail.com. I'll print your complete statement with your name and my response in my blog. Or are you afraid to engage with my stroke-addled mind? I would like to know what your definition of competence in stroke is.
World Stroke Congress 2024 Session Report: “Borderline Indications in Stroke Thrombolysis”
- Salome Bosshart , MD
World Stroke Congress
October 23–26, 2024
Session: Borderline Indications in Stroke Thrombolysis
The session was chaired by Ana Catarina Fonseca (Lisbon, Portugal) and Sven Poli (Tübingen, Germany).
Michael D. Hill (Calgary, Canada), co-PI of the TEMPO-2 trial, kicked off the session with a talk about “Thrombolysis in Minor and/or Non-Disabling Stroke.” The TEMPO-2 trial, which was recently published in The Lancet, included patients with minor acute ischemic stroke (defined as NIHSS 0-5) and intracranial occlusion and randomized 1:1 to thrombolysis with tenecteplase (TNK) or non-thrombolytic standard of care. The trial was stopped early due to futility and showed an increased risk for symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage and more deaths in the thrombolysis group. Dr. Hill highlighted that patients in the non-thrombolytic group did better than expected with a recanalization rate that was clearly higher than other trials have previously shown for patients receiving antiplatelet monotherapy. This suggests that dual antiplatelet treatment is a very active treatment that should not be underestimated in terms of both benefit and harm. The findings from TEMPO-2 and ARAMIS changed practice in Calgary such that minor strokes are not treated by thrombolysis anymore.
David Seiffge (Bern, Switzerland) followed with a talk on “Thrombolysis and NOAC-Pretreatment.” There is a significant burden of “breakthrough strokes” in patients who are already on anticoagulants. Forty percent of Swiss patients with atrial fibrillation are already on anticoagulation at stroke onset. The most frequent reason to withhold thrombolysis in patients within the treatment window are anticoagulants because international guidelines mention that they “may be harmful.” However, Dr. Seiffge pointed out that, to date, there is some observational data that show no increase in bleeding risk of thrombolysis in patients with anticoagulants compared with patients without. Following the current guidelines thus leads to ethically questionable exclusion of patients who could potentially benefit from thrombolysis. DO-IT, a randomized controlled superiority trial to determine safety and efficacy of thrombolysis in patients with recent DOAC intake (<48h), is currently being conducted in Switzerland and Canada. However, based on current observational data and in face of increasing numbers of stroke patients on anticoagulation, the Swiss team under Prof. Urs Fischer suggests changing the guidelines before conclusion of DO-IT. Consistently, they have already changed their local guidelines.
Bruce Campbell (Melbourne, Australia) talked about “Thrombolysis After 4.5h of Symptom Onset.” The relevance of the topic is illustrated by the fact that over 75% of stroke patients present beyond 4.5 hours. Prof. Campbell led through a variety of studies concluding that there was no definite benefit of alteplase or TNK >4.5 hours using standard CT selection. He then elucidated treatment selection with perfusion imaging (penumbral imaging) and DWI-FLAIR mismatch, which inform us of two entirely different things, but both enable a patient selection that likely benefits from thrombolysis beyond 4.5 hours. He highlighted the importance of NCCT for safety as extensive hypodensities indicate increased risk of hemorrhage.
Ashkan Shoamanesh (Hamilton, Canada) elaborated on “Thrombolysis in Patients With Cortical Microbleeds,” a concern that arises because cortical microbleeds indicate small vessel diseases that are more prone to bleeding. The two underlying pathologies of cortical microbleeds are atherosclerosis and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). As 20% of stroke patients have cortical microbleeds, the topic is highly relevant. However, there is good data indicating no increased bleeding risk of thrombolysis in patients with cortical microbleeds, with the possible exception of patients with >10 microbleeds. It is important to note that cortical microbleeds are associated with poor functional outcome after stroke, even if without receiving thrombolysis. We have yet to understand the incremental risk of thrombolysis. Additionally, it has been shown in several case reports that patients with cortical microbleeds develop new microbleeds in the first week after stroke whether or not they received thrombolysis.
European and North American guidelines agree that there is insufficient data to screen stroke patients for microbleeds before thrombolysis and that it may even harm patients due to treatment delay. The only discrepancy in guidelines is for patients with >10 microbleeds for whom Europeans advise against and North Americans in favor of thrombolysis, both acknowledging the weak evidence on this patient subgroup.
Andrew Lee (Adelaide, Australia) challenged the audience to turn its eyes to “Thrombolysis in Central Retinal Artery Occlusion.” In preclinical models, it was shown that the retina shows almost full recovery after 97min of ischemia but can still potentially recover up to 240mins of ischemia. Intra-arterial application of tPA into the ophthalmic artery shows a benefit of treatment within 12 hours. Unfortunately, intravenous tPA within the same time window led to severe adverse events, including intracerebral hemorrhages, and the trial had to be stopped. However, it showed that patients with central retinal artery occlusion benefit if lysed intravenously within 6 hours.
Chairwoman Ana Catarina Fonseca (Lisbon, Portugal) closed the session with “Off-Label Use of IV Thrombolysis: What We Know From The Real-World Data.” Off-label use of thrombolysis is very common and has increased over the years from 30 to 75%. After giving an overview of indications for thrombolysis in the United States and Europe, Prof. Fonseca explained that FDA approvement is commonly based on exclusion criteria of trials published before the time of FDA approval and are rarely updated despite high-level evidence. Several off-label indications have been shown to not be associated with poorer outcome or higher symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage rates. Data from off-label use has been progressively incorporated into scientific society guidelines. Therefore, many indications in the guidelines are off-label. There is an association between use of older drugs and off-label use indicating that industry and regulators show little interest in paying for adjustment of regulations for old drugs.
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
World Stroke Organization Launches Global Coalition to Drive Policy Action on Stroke Care
This is how fucking godawful the WSO is. Ignoring what survivors want; 100% recovery and talking about 'care'! Schadenfreude should hit everyone in the WSO when they become the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke and they start complaining about not getting recovered. I don't even know why they have stroke in their name, they DO NOTHING FOR SURVIVORS!
World Stroke Organization Launches Global Coalition to Drive Policy Action on Stroke Care
On World Stroke Day, October 29, the World Stroke Organization (WSO) announces the launch of a global coalition aimed at accelerating policy action on stroke—now the second leading cause of death and the third leading cause of disability worldwide.
Over the past three decades, the global burden of stroke has doubled. Stroke's impact is expected to increase by one-third by 2050. This rise could result in 9.7 million annual deaths and a significant increase in those affected by stroke-related disabilities. Beyond the immense human toll, stroke is projected to cost the global economy over USD 1.6 trillion annually by 2050.
“There is a clear misperception of stroke as an unavoidable, age-related condition with limited treatment options,” said WSO President, Professor Jeyaraj Pandian. “Evidence shows that stroke is increasingly affecting younger populations, with 80% of all cases preventable. Expanding access to acute treatments - which only 5% of eligible patients currently access - can transform patient outcomes, while specialist rehabilitation can enhance recovery and social reintegration. Not only is stroke largely preventable, it is treatable and beatable.”(NO, it's not, you have zero evidence for that statement!)
In September 2025, Heads of State, Ministers of Health and Finance, and development stakeholders will convene in New York for the fourth UN High-Level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs). With only five years remaining to SDG 3.4 on reducing premature mortality from NCDs, this gathering presents a critical opportunity to drive commitment to policy interventions and investment in stroke.
“Around the world we can see the huge gaps in stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) at every stage in the patient care(NOT RECOVERY!) pathway. Each of these gaps represents enormous potential for progress. Action on stroke really is the key to accelerating progress on health and development goals,” said Prof Sheila Martins, co-Chair of the Coalition. “WSO’s network of global and national experts stand ready to support governments develop and implement stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) systems that will help reduce their burden of disease.”
The stroke advocacy coalition, comprising health and scientific, patient organizations, and industry leaders, is united in its mission to drive engagement with decision-makers at all levels ahead of the 2025 UN meeting. For details of current members visit https://tinyurl.com/44wbp8pb
Notes for editors
1 The World Stroke Organization is the world’s only global NGO with a sole focus on stroke and in official relations with the UN. It is committed to reducing the global burden of stroke through advancing access to effective prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, and support. WSO is a membership organization and represents over 50,000 stroke experts in every global region. WSO’s 100 Society Members represent international, regional and national scientific, medical and patient organizations.
2 More information on stroke burden and recommendations for policy makers can be found in The Lancet Neurology – WSO Commission on Stroke https://www.thelancet.com/commissions/global-burden-stroke
3 WSO policy recommendations for implementation of effective acute stroke treatment can be found in Time for a Revolution in Stroke Care(NOT RECOVERY!)
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241028866822/en/
For more information, contact the WSO Campaign Manager awiseman@world-stroke.org +44 7940 029444
Thursday, October 3, 2024
Fly brain breakthrough 'huge leap' to unlock human mind
How excited is your competent? doctor with this? Decades from now maybe we'll be able to see the broken connectomes from your stroke and fix them. At least if we get survivors in charge of the WSO and other fucking failures of stroke associations in order to develop a strategy to accomplish that.
Fly brain breakthrough 'huge leap' to unlock human mind
They can walk, hover and the males can even sing love songs to woo mates - all this with a brain that’s tinier than a pinhead.
Now for the first time scientists researching the brain of a fly have identified the position, shape and connections of every single one of its 130,000 cells and 50 million connections.
It's the most detailed analysis of the brain of an adult animal ever produced.
One leading brain specialist independent of the new research described the breakthrough as a "huge leap" in our understanding of our own brains.
One of the research leaders said it would shed new light into “the mechanism of thought”.
Dr Gregory Jefferis, of the Medical Research Council's Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB) in Cambridge told BBC News that currently we have no idea how the network of brain cells in each of our heads enables us to interact with each other and the world around us.
“What are the connections? How do the signals flow through the system that can let us process the information to recognise your face, that lets you hear my voice and turn these words into electrical signals?
“The mapping of the fly brain is really remarkable and will help us get a real grasp of how our own brains work.”
We have a million times as many brain cells, or neurons, than the fruit fly which was studied. So how can the wiring diagram of an insect brain help scientists learn how we think?
The images the scientists have produced, which have been published in the journal Nature, show a tangle of wiring that is as beautiful as it is complex.
Its shape and structure holds the key to explaining how such a tiny organ can carry out so many powerful computational tasks. Developing a computer the size of a poppy seed capable of all these tasks is way beyond the ability of modern science.
Dr Mala Murthy, another of the project’s co-leaders, from Princeton University, said the new wiring diagram, known scientifically as a connectome, would be “transformative for neuroscientists”.
“It will help researchers trying to better understand how a healthy brain works. In the future we hope that it will be possible to compare what happens when things go wrong in our brains.”
That is a view backed by Dr Lucia Prieto Godino, a group leader in brain research at the Francis Crick Institute in London, who is independent of the research team.
"Researchers have completed the connectomes of a simple worm which has 300 wires and a maggot which has three thousand, but having a complete connectome of something with 130,000 wires is an amazing technical feat which paves the way for finding the connectomes for larger brains such as the mouse and maybe in several decades our own."
The researchers have been able to identify separate circuits for many individual functions and show how they are connected.
The wires involved with movement for example are at the base of the brain, whereas those for processing vision are towards the side. There are many more neurons involved in the latter because seeing requires much more computational power.
While scientists already knew about the separate circuits they did not know how they were connected together.
Why are flies so difficult to swat?
Other researchers are already using the circuit diagrams, for example to work out why flies are so difficult to swat.
The vision circuits detect which direction your rolled up newspaper is coming from, and they pass on the signal to the fly's legs.
But crucially, they send a stronger jumping signal to the legs facing away from the object of their imminent demise. So you could say they jump away without even having to think – literally faster than the speed of thought.
This finding may explain why we lumbering humans seldom squash flies.
The wiring diagram was made by slicing up a fly brain using what is essentially a microscopic cheese grater, photographing each of the 7,000 slices and digitally putting them altogether. Then the Princeton team applied artificial intelligence to extract the shapes and connections of all the neurons. But the AI wasn’t perfect – the researchers still had to fix over three million mistakes by hand.
This in itself was a technical tour de force, but the job was only half done. The map on its own was meaningless unless there was a description of what each wire was supposed to do, according to Dr Philipp Schlegel, who is also from the Medical Research Council's Laboratory of Molecular Biology.
“This data is a bit like Google Maps but for brains: the raw wiring diagram between neurons is like knowing which structures correspond to streets and buildings.
"Describing the neurons is like adding the names for streets and towns, business opening times, phone numbers, reviews, etc. to the map. You need both for it to be really useful.”
The fly connectome is available to any scientist that wants to use it to guide their research. Dr Schlegel believes that the world of neuroscience will see “an avalanche of discoveries in the next couple of years” thanks to this new map.
A human brain is so much larger than the fly’s, and we don’t yet have the technology to capture all the information about its wiring.
But the researchers believe that perhaps in 30 years it may be possible to have a human connectome. The fly brain, they say, is a start of a new, deeper understanding of how our own minds work.
The research has been conducted by a large international collaboration of scientists, called the FlyWire Consortium.
Saturday, September 28, 2024
Roughly half of all healthy life lost to stroke is caused by haemorrhagic subtype, new study suggests
And is the WSO(World Stroke Organization) solving the problem? NO it's not! The WSO is TOTALLY FUCKING USELESS and needs to be dismantled and run by survivors!
Send me hate mail on this: oc1dean@gmail.com. I'll print your complete statement with your name and my response in my blog. Or are you afraid to engage with my stroke-addled mind? Your patients need an explanation of why you aren't working on survivor requirements of 100% recovery protocols.
Roughly half of all healthy life lost to stroke is caused by haemorrhagic subtype, new study suggests
The analysis revealed that, with 81 million healthy years of life having been lost, haemorrhagic strokes were responsible for half of all stroke-related disability and lives lost globally in 2021. The most affected people were found to be those aged 70 years and younger—as well as those living in low-income countries, where the proportion of strokes characterised by intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) is double compared to high-income countries (37% vs 18%, respectively).
In addition, regarding the major drivers of stroke across the globe, the GBD analysis’ investigators report that—“for the first time”—their study suggests ambient particulate matter air pollution is a top risk factor for subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH), currently contributing to 14% of the death and disability caused by this stroke subtype at a rate that is comparable to smoking.
More broadly, the researchers conclude that the worldwide stroke burden has undergone a rapid rise since 1990, with ageing and growing populations as well as a significant increase in people’s exposure to environmental and behavioural risk factors being among the key drivers escalating stroke’s prevalence today.
These findings were recently published in The Lancet Neurology and are also set to be presented at next month’s World Stroke Congress (WSC; 23–26 October, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates).
Rapid rise of stroke burden
Although stroke is now considered a highly preventable and treatable condition, this newly published GBD analysis provides evidence that there has been a notable uptick in the global burden of the condition over the past three decades.
Across the globe, the number of people having a new stroke rose to 11.9 million in 2021—a 70% increase from 1990. In addition, the number of stroke survivors rose to 93.8 million (up 86% versus 1990) and stroke-related deaths rose to 7.3 million (up 44% versus 1990), making the condition the third most common cause of death worldwide in 2021, behind ischaemic heart disease and COVID-19. More than three quarters of those affected by stroke live in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), the GBD analysis also found.
The number of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost to stroke was observed to have increased by 32% between 1990 and 2021, with the estimated amount of healthy life lost growing from 121.4 million years to 160.5 million years—making stroke the fourth leading cause of worldwide health loss after COVID-19, ischaemic heart disease, and neonatal disorders.
Investigators for the GBD analysis conclude that the burden of stroke is rising due in no small part to population growth and the prevalence of ageing populations across the globe. However, they also identify a number of preventable environmental, metabolic and behavioural risk factors that have “increased substantially” and contributed to rising stroke numbers from 1990 to 2021. Examples include an 88% increase in high body mass index (BMI), a 72% increase in high temperatures, and a 32% increase in high blood sugar rates.
And, while accounting for the impact of demographics via ‘age standardisation’ revealed that there was a trend towards lower worldwide rates of stroke incidence (down 22%), prevalence (down 8%), deaths and DALYs (both down 39%) across almost every level of country income between 1990 and 2021, the investigators ultimately found that improvements in global incidence rates have “stagnated” since 2015. In addition, age-standardised rates of stroke incidence and prevalence, as well as stroke-related death and DALYs, have worsened across Southeast Asia, East Asia and Oceania, and also in people younger than 70 years of age.
“The global growth of the number of people who develop stroke—and died from or remain disabled by stroke—is growing fast, strongly suggesting that currently used stroke prevention strategies are not sufficiently effective,” said Valery Feigin (Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand), lead author of the recently published analysis. “New proven-effective, population-wide and motivational, individual prevention strategies that could be applied to all people at risk of having a stroke, regardless of the level of risk—as recommended in the recent Lancet Neurology Commission on Stroke—should be implemented across the globe urgently.”
Discrepancies and risk factors
The present study has revealed that, in 2021, there were “striking differences” in the overall stroke burden between world regions and national income levels. In high-income areas in North America and Australasia, and middle-income parts of Latin America—regions with the lowest stroke burden—the age-standardised rates of incidence and prevalence were lowest in New Zealand (67.8 and 707.4 per 100,000 people, respectively); death rates were lowest in Canada (20.4 per 100,000 people); and DALY rates were lowest in Australia (435 per 100,000 people). In contrast, in low- and middle-income regions of East and Central Asia, and also sub-Saharan Africa, the rates of incidence, prevalence, death and DALYs were between two and 10 times higher (more than 248, 1,458, 190 and 4,320 per 100,000 people, respectively) in 2021.
“Stroke-related health loss disproportionately impacts many of the most disadvantaged countries in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa due to the growing burden of uncontrolled risk factors, especially poorly controlled high blood pressure, and rising levels of obesity and type 2 diabetes in young adults, as well as the lack of stroke prevention and care services in these regions,” explained co-author Catherine Johnson (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation [IHME], Seattle, USA). “The shift in stroke burden towards younger populations is likely to continue unless effective preventive strategies are implemented urgently.”
The investigators found that metabolic risk factors—especially high BMI, high systolic blood pressure and high low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol—contributed to the greatest level of stroke burden across all country income levels, ranging from 66–70%, in 2021. This was followed by environmental risk factors collectively—including air pollution, low/high ambient temperature and lead exposure—in LMICs, ranging from 35–53%. Overall, in 2021, the five leading global risk factors for stroke were high systolic blood pressure, particulate matter air pollution, smoking, high LDL cholesterol, and household air pollution, with considerable variation by age, sex and location.
Alongside their finding that ambient particulate matter air pollution is now a leading risk factor for SAH, the investigators report that “substantial progress” has been made in reducing the overall global stroke burden from risk factors linked to poor diet, air pollution, and smoking, with rates of health loss due to diets high in processed meat and low in vegetables declining by 40% and 30%, respectively, particulate matter air pollution dropping by 20%, and smoking decreasing by 13%, from 1990 to 2021. This suggests that strategies to reduce exposure to these risk factors over the past three decades—such as clean air zones and public smoking bans—have been successful, the researchers aver.
Opportunities for progress
Among other key findings from the GBD analysis is an estimation that the global number of stroke-related DALYs, attributable to a total of 23 different risk factors, has risen from 100 million years of healthy life lost in 1990 to 135 million in 2021—presenting “a public health challenge and an opportunity for action”. The largest proportions of these risk factors are found in Eastern Europe, Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa, according to the researchers.
“With 84% of the stroke burden linked to 23 modifiable risk factors, there are tremendous opportunities to alter the trajectory of stroke risk for the next generation,” Johnson added. “Given that ambient air pollution is reciprocally linked with ambient temperature and climate change, the importance of urgent climate actions and measures to reduce air pollution cannot be overestimated. And, with increasing exposure to risk factors such as high blood sugar and diet high in sugar-sweetened drinks, there is a critical need for interventions focused on obesity and metabolic syndromes. Identifying sustainable ways to work with communities to take action to prevent and control modifiable risk factors for stroke is essential to address this growing crisis.”
The authors also believe that, through implementing and monitoring the evidence-based recommendations set out in the 2023 World Stroke Organization-Lancet Neurology Commission on Stroke, there is an opportunity to “drastically reduce” the global burden of stroke in this decade and beyond, as well as improve brain health and the overall wellbeing of millions of people around the world.
You can read about their useless prevention crapola here:
Pragmatic solutions to reduce the global burden of stroke: a World Stroke Organization–Lancet Neurology Commission
NOTHING ON 100% RECOVERY SOLUTIONS; that is how fucking worthless this is! It's like they have never talked to any stroke survivor!
According to Feigin, “additional and more effective” stroke prevention strategies “must be urgently implemented across all countries”—including task-shifting from doctors to nurses and health volunteers; the wider use of evidence-based mobile and telehealth platforms; pragmatic solutions to address critical gaps in stroke service delivery; workforce capacity building; and epidemiological surveillance systems.
Sunday, September 22, 2024
Philips, World Stroke Organization Call for Better Access to Stroke Care
This is how fucking useless the WSO is; 'access' to 'care' NOT DELIVERING RECOVERY OR RESULTS! They need to be dismantled and run by survivors.The WSO is totally fucking useless for survivors! They don't even have a goal for 100% recovery! Leaders tackle the hard jobs, the WSO has NO leadership. The president of the WSO can send me hate mail on this(Oc1dean@gmail.com), I'll gladly respond in print and in person to your board of directors! Are you too chickenshit to discuss stroke with a survivor?
Philips, World Stroke Organization Call for Better Access to Stroke Care
Approximately 12 million people worldwide experience strokes each year.
Royal Philips and the World Stroke Organization (WSO) have teamed to bring greater awareness to the need for best-practice care(NOT RECOVERY!) for stroke patients.
In a Sept. 10 news announcement, Philips said it is “Time for a revolution in stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!),” referencing a new policy paper co-published with the WSO.
The news announcement noted that stroke or cerebrovascular accident — “a blockage in a blood vessel in the brain that prevents adequate blood supply to brain tissue and leads to permanent loss of brain cells” — impacts approximately 12 million people worldwide every year and is increasingly impacting people under the age of 55.
The Philips-WSO announcement was accompanied by an editorial in The Lancet Neurology titled, “A Real Chance to Reduce Death and Disability from Stroke.”
“The direct and indirect costs are conservatively estimated to be around $900 billion [U.S. dollars] annually and are expected to almost double over the next 25 years,” the announcement added.
While the technology to prevent stroke and even reverse its effects with rapid treatment does exist, “There is insufficient focus on health-care expenditure and research funding to advance stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!),” the announcement said. “As a result, access to timely treatment remains limited, and huge disparities in stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) persist.”
The Philips-WSO policy paper, aligned with recent guidance from the World Health Organization, listed six policy interventions “to improve outcomes and reduce direct costs with substantial potential savings, releasing essential resources for other priorities across struggling health-care systems.”
The six suggestions included assessing current gaps in stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) and prioritizing stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) in health plans; investing in and expanding essential stroke services, such as intravenous thrombolysis, in which medication is injected to dissolve the blood clot that caused the stroke; investing in and expanding advanced stroke treatments, such as mechanical thrombectomy, a minimally invasive procedure to remove the blood clot; improving health-care workforce skills; ensuring adequate reimbursement for essential and advanced stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!); and building a way to actualize potential savings from essential and advanced acute stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!).
“Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide,” said Philips Chief Medical Officer Carla Goulart Peron. “The burden of stroke on patients, their families, the health-care system, and society is huge. The time is now for a coordinated approach to revolutionize strokecare(NOT RECOVERY!), bringing together investment in care(NOT RECOVERY!) and treatment, infrastructure, awareness and a focus on effective policymaking. The benefits are significant, both for healthcare systems and societies, and most importantly in delivering better care(NOT RECOVERY!) for millions of patients worldwide.”
Wednesday, July 17, 2024
Let’s keep enhancing stroke care together🧠 We are delighted to announce our new #eLearning module: 📝@WorldStrokeOrg Global Stroke Guidelines
Look how absolutely appalling this is. 'Care' NOT RECOVERY OR RESULTS! And guidelines; NOT PROTOCOLS!
Enhancing Stroke Care: WSO Global Stroke Guidelines
Wednesday, July 3, 2024
our @WorldStrokeEd podcast series – where knowledge meets action in the fight against stroke:
You can check them out. Since it's from the World Stroke Organization don't expect anything useful, they've proven not to have anything for survivors.
our@WorldStrokeEd podcast series – where knowledge meets action in the fight against stroke:
Thursday, June 27, 2024
ESOC(European Stroke Organisation Conference) 2024 Key Highlights now available
You'll immediately notice how useless this was. 'Care', NOT how we are getting survivors to 100% recovery! The WSO is totally worthless for getting survivors recovered!
Send me hate mail on this: oc1dean@gmail.com. I'll print your complete statement with your name and my response in my blog. Or are you afraid to engage with my stroke-addled mind? You'll want 100% recovery when you are the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke! My definition of competence is 100% recovery, what is your definition?
ESOC(European Stroke Organisation Conference) 2024 Key Highlights now available

Description: Join us for an insightful webinar organized jointly by the European Stroke Organisation (ESO) and the World Stroke Organisation (WSO) to share the most significant highlights from the recent European Stroke Congress held in Basel (Switzerland) in May 2024. This is a must-attend event for healthcare professionals, researchers, and anyone involved in stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!) and treatment. Don’t miss this opportunity to stay at the forefront of stroke research and clinical practice.
Learning Objectives:
- Delve into the latest research and discussions on whether current protocols for treating Intracerebral Hemorrhage (ICH) need an update to improve patient outcomes
- Explore the criteria for selecting patients for Tenecteplase treatment, informed by the newest evidence and expert insights
- Gain a comprehensive understanding of the future directions in stroke rehabilitation research and the promising advancements on the horizon.
Chairs: Prof. Simona Sacco (Italy) and Prof. Sheila Martins (Brazil)
Scientific Program:
- Welcome & Introduction by chairs
- Is it time to change our protocols in treating ICH? – Dr. Else Charlotte Sandset (Norway)
- Who to treat and not to treat with tenecteplase? – Dr. Patrik Michel (Switzerland)
- Research in stroke rehabilitation: where does the road take us? Prof. Alexander Leff (UK)
- Q&A Discussion
Date & Time: June 24th, 3pm (CEST)
Monday, June 17, 2024
The World Stroke Organization has set targets of a 15% treatment rate through thrombolysis and 5% through endovascular treatment.
This is APPALLING! The WSO needs to be run by survivors. Survivors don't want just 'treatment', they want 100% recovery and the current WSO will never get there!
The World Stroke Organization has set targets of a 15% treatment rate through thrombolysis and 5% through endovascular treatment.
Wednesday, June 12, 2024
Siemens, World Stroke Organization ink 2-year stroke care deal
NO, NO, NO! This is how useless the WSO is; 'care' NOT RECOVERY OR RESULTS! They need to be taken over by survivors, we'll get shit done!
Siemens, World Stroke Organization ink 2-year stroke care deal
Siemens Healthineers and the World Stroke Organization have inked a two-year partnership to improve global access to stroke care.
The collaboration will focus on low- and middle-income countries and will allow Siemens and the World Stroke Organization to offer education and training programs that spotlight stroke as a global healthcare issue.
Stroke is the second-leading cause of death and the third-leading cause of disability in adults. Its incidence is rising in low- and middle-income countries, Siemens said, and the global financial cost of stroke is expected to reach $1.6 trillion by 2050. Low- and middle-income countries will experience 87% of the disease burden.
Siemens and the World Stroke Organization will offer hands-on education workshops and training programs aimed at strengthening clinical capacity and driving access to mechanical thrombectomy, they said.
"Delivery of mechanical thrombectomy requires a complex range of actions across the healthcare system, from raising public awareness of stroke symptoms to ensuring timely hospital presentation, to bringing acute healthcare systems up to levels that enable fast diagnosis and clinical decision-making," according to Siemens.
Tuesday, June 4, 2024
How does climate change affect stroke risk?
If the WSO had competently solved stroke to 100% recovery it wouldn't make a difference. But they are completely incompetent in that regard!
Send me hate mail on this: oc1dean@gmail.com. I'll print your complete statement with your name and my response in my blog. Or are you afraid to engage with my stroke-addled mind? You'll want 100% recovery when you are the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke!
How does climate change affect stroke risk?
Sunday, June 2, 2024
WSO hosted its first stroke policy ever at the 77th World Health Assembly on May 27th.
I'm sure this will be a COMPLETE FAILURE since the focus is on 'care', NOT RECOVERY OR RESULTS! And with no survivors there they aren't even doing what survivors want; 100% RECOVERY!
Send me hate mail on this: oc1dean@gmail.com. I'll print your complete statement with your name and my response in my blog. Or are you afraid to engage with my stroke-addled mind? You'll want 100% recovery when you are the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke! Explain how you're going to get to 100% recovery if you don't start that research RIGHT NOW!
WSO hosted its first stroke policy ever at the 77th World Health Assembly on May 27th.
Monday, May 27, 2024
WSO initiative
THIS is why the WSO is fucking incompetent! 'CARE' NOT RESULTS OR RECOVERY!
Everyone in the WSO needs to be fired!
Cut stroke in half: Polypill for primary prevention in stroke
This still leaves 5 million persons a year disabled by stroke! Which is why the WSO needs to be run by survivors, they wouldn't leave anyone behind because they would solve stroke to 100% recovery! LEADERS SOLVE PROBLEMS; nobody in the WSO is a leader!
Cut stroke in half: Polypill for primary prevention in stroke
- PMID: 29461155
- DOI: 10.1177/1747493018761190
Abstract
The study was designed to prove the World Stroke Organisation’s concept of a
comprehensive intervention approach in primary prevention to “Cut Stroke in Half”,
conceived by former World Stroke Organisation President Michael Brainin from Austria,
and Professor Valery Feigin from New Zealand.
This review summarizes the potential for polypill therapies for stroke prevention. While a number of studies applying different approaches regarding polypill have been performed, none of them has had a focus on stroke as the main outcome. A combination pill containing drugs such as statins, diuretics, and other antihypertensives is currently available in various formats. Estimates focusing mostly on primary prevention show that using such a combination drug a reduction in the 5-year stroke incidence by 50% can be achieved - especially in low- and middle-income countries with a high prevalence of risk factors even among people at young ages. A combination of a large supporting population-wide program with a registry-based quality control is the most likely perspective and can be achieved within a reasonable time frame and potentially have significant influence in young stroke populations.
Friday, May 24, 2024
WSO - United in Action to Transform Stroke Care
This is absolutely APPALLING! 'Care' NOT RESULTS OR RECOVERY! They have stroke in their name; why the fuck can't they at least try to solve stroke to 100% recovery? A perfect example of why survivors need to be in charge.
WSO - United in Action to Transform Stroke Care
