Project educates
community about stroke
Message of screening
program, educational video is that stroke is treatable disease
By LOIS
BAKER
News Services Editor
Only a few years
ago, having a stroke brought disability as surely as sunrise brought dawn.
The idea that a person could "recover" from a stroke was not even on the
horizon.
Clinical-research
advances during the past decade changed that. UB neurosurgeons and others
now can save stroke patients from certain disability using new clot-busting
drugs and new drug delivery methods. They speak of stroke as a "brain
attack." If patients know the symptoms and get to the hospital soon enough,
they can avoid the often-debilitating damage an untreated stroke can cause.
The problem
has been getting that message to the public.
In May 1997-May
has been designated "stroke month"-Lee Guterman, UB associate professor
of neurosurgery, and his departmental colleagues decided to begin a project
to help educate the public about stroke's symptoms and risk factors. The
project had particular resonance in Buffalo and environs, where stroke
risk is higher than the national average. The result was the Western New
York Stroke Screening Program.
"The purpose
of the screening program, despite its name, was not so much to identify
people at risk, which we do, but to get the word out about the signs and
symptoms of stroke," Guterman said.
"The main
message we want to get across to people is that stroke is a treatable
disease. If they recognize the symptoms and get help quickly, there is
a good chance to reverse the stroke."
The first
screening was held in a booth in the Boulevard Mall. A team of physicians,
nurses, dietitians, ultrasound operators and support staff took heart-rate
and blood-pressure readings and administered sonograms of the carotid
artery to find out if there was any blockage.
They offered
the National Stroke Association's risk factor assessment, provided nutrition
counseling and presented a video on stroke's warning signs. The final
step was a brief evaluation of all data by a neurosurgeon or neurologist.
All services were provided free of charge.
People stood
in line for hours waiting to be screened: Still, more than 200 had to
be turned away. The team screened 1,000 people over three days at a second
mall event but the process was chaotic. Members decided to target senior-citizen
centers.
Over the
following two years, they held events at eight centers and one corporation.
To date, they have screened 3,200 people.
Letters
have been sent to physicians of those found to be at high risk of stroke.
Thirty percent of participants had "reportable" disease.
Incidence
of stroke is high in the Western New York population at large for several
reasons, including a long history of smoking, unhealthy eating habits
and obesity, he said.
The project
began as a solely volunteer effort, but has since received monetary support
from Independent Health, Kalieda Health and the Women's Board at Millard
Fillmore Hospital. Acuson Corporation and Hewlett Packard have donated
the ultrasound equipment.
The group
now is producing an educational video and also is planning to bring the
screening program into local companies-they already have worked with the
Buffalo Police Department and Airsep Corporation-and to enroll people
at high risk in education classes on-site to encourage changes in lifestyles
that promote stroke.
Their database
of screened patients also will provide rich potential for research, Guterman
said. The group presented the results of its first study based on data
from those screened at a recent professional meeting. The study showed
that ultrasound screening of the carotid artery is a reliable and cost-effect
way to identify people with a condition called asymptomatic carotid artery
stenosis, a significant stroke risk factor.
That study
was headed by Adnan I. Qureshi, clinical instructor in the Department
of Neurosurgery.
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