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Telemedicine Stroke Program saves Woman
Newswise — While suffering a major stroke at
her home near Mena, Iva Sikes assumed the
worst, not knowing that a University of
Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS)-led
telemedicine program would provide her a
complete recovery.
Sikes, who lives alone four miles outside of
Mena, was about to tend her flower garden
June 1 when the left side of her body went
numb, causing her to fall.
Her only hope of recovery was to get the
right diagnosis from a stroke neurologist so
she could receive t-PA, the only
FDA-approved drug that could break up the
blood clot that was starving her brain of
oxygen and nutrients.
And it had to be done within three hours.
Sikes, 89, was wearing a lifeline, a
communication device that allowed her to
summon her grandson and an ambulance.
“I was sinking fast,” she said just 10 days
after the stroke. “I told my grandson, ‘I’ll
not be here long.’ My body, my mind,
everything was sinking.”
Had her stroke occurred just nine months
ago, her chance of recovery would have been
slim, said Salah Keyrouz, M.D., Sikes’
stroke neurologist at UAMS.
Starting Nov. 1, Mena Regional Hospital was
among the first of now nine hospitals to
join the Arkansas SAVES (Stroke Assistance
Through Virtual Emergency Support) program,
which links rural hospitals to stroke
specialists at UAMS and Sparks Health System
in Fort Smith.
The program is administered by the UAMS
Center for Distance Health, which was
created by Curtis Lowery, M.D., chairman of
the UAMS Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology.
Stroke neurologists are on call 24 hours a
day, and remote hospitals participate at no
cost.
Keyrouz, medical director of the SAVES
program, took the call from the Mena
hospital after Sikes arrived.
He was able to communicate via real-time
two-way video with the local hospital
medical staff and Sikes. He also was able to
view her high-definition brain CT images
taken at the hospital.
“In addition to her left-side paralysis, she
had lost peripheral vision on the left side,
too,” Keyrouz said. “I knew then that she
had a large stroke.”
Despite her advanced age, Keyrouz determined
that she was a good candidate for the
clot-busting t-PA.
It was important that Sikes was able to tell
him definitively that the stroke had
occurred at 9:30 a.m., which meant the drug
could be given within the critical
three-hour window.
Patients who wake up with a stroke, for
example, and don’t know when the stroke
began are not eligible to receive t-PA.
“If you can intervene very early on, there’s
a chance that you can melt the blood clot by
giving this very powerful medicine,” Keyrouz
said.
“If you do it beyond three hours, there is
potential that you’re irrigating an area of
the brain that’s irreversibly dead. The risk
of bleeding is also high.”
Sikes and her family agreed to the t-PA
treatment after Keyrouz informed them that
it would give her roughly a 30 percent
chance of improvement, but a 2 percent to 6
percent chance of bleeding in the brain.
“This is a lady who was independent, going
about her activities and enjoying life,”
Keyrouz said. “Without the medication, there
was a very big possibility that she would
live the rest of her life paralyzed, not
feeling anything on her left side and with
slurred speech.”
Twenty-four hours after receiving the t-PA,
Keyrouz followed up with Sikes using
telemedicine.
The exam showed that Sikes had almost
completely recovered. The paralysis was
gone, her peripheral vision had returned,
and her speech was nearly back to normal.
“The nurse would touch her with a pin on the
left and right, and she was feeling
perfectly normal on both sides,” Keyrouz
said.
“She just had mild weakness in the left arm
and left leg. She had such a remarkable
recovery.”
Sikes said she was surprised by her recovery
and grateful for the technology that helped
save her.
“It’s just so wonderful, I’d like to tell
the world,” she said of the SAVES program.
“I’m here today because of my lifeline and
the medication I didn’t know anything
about.”
The SAVES program is made possible by
partnerships between the UAMS Center for
Distance Health, the state Department of
Human Services Division of Medical Services
and Sparks Health System in Fort Smith.
The program was established with a one-year,
$6.1 million DHS Medicaid contract. Since
the program began in November, there have
been 38 SAVES consults and four patients
have received t-PA.
The nine hospitals participating in the
SAVES program so far are: Baptist Health
Medical Center – Arkadelphia, White River
Medical Center in Batesville, Baxter
Regional Medical Center in Mountain Home,
Booneville Community Hospital, DeWitt
Hospital, Johnson Regional Medical Center in
Clarksville, McGehee-Desha County Hospital,
Helena Regional Medical Center and Mena
Regional Health System.
Additional hospitals across Arkansas will be
added in the coming months, said Lowery,
director of the UAMS Center for Distance
Health.
The most recent statistics from the national
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
show that Arkansas had 1,847 stroke-related
deaths in 2005, which dwarfs Arkansas’ other
major causes of death.
Arkansas ranks third highest among all
states in stroke deaths, with 61 per 100,000
residents.
Only Alabama and Tennessee had a higher
number. The nationwide direct and indirect
cost of medical and institutional care of
permanently disabled stroke victims was
$57.9 billion in 2006.
UAMS is the state’s only comprehensive
academic health center, with five colleges,
a graduate school, a new 540,000-square-foot
hospital, six centers of excellence and a
statewide network of regional centers.
UAMS has 2,652 students and 733 medical
residents.
Its centers of excellence include the
Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute,
the Jackson T. Stephens Spine &
Neurosciences Institute, the Myeloma
Institute for Research and Therapy, the
Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute, the
Psychiatric Research Institute and the
Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging.
It is the state’s largest public employer
with more than 10,000 employees, including
nearly 1,150 physicians who provide medical
care to patients at UAMS, Arkansas
Children’s Hospital, the VA Medical Center
and UAMS’ Area Health Education Centers
throughout the state. Visit
www.uams.edu
or
www.uamshealth.com.
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