July 05, 2012
Blood clots dissolved by new approach
Researchers have developed a new drug delivery system that
sends life-saving drugs directly to obstructed blood vessels,
dissolving blood clots before they cause serious damage or
death.
This new approach uses only a
fraction of the drug dose normally needed and so lessens the
bleeding side effects that currently limit use of
clot-busting drugs.
Professor Peter Weissberg, our
Medical Director, said: “This is a potentially
important advance that needs further evaluation in
patients.
“When a blood clot forms inside an
artery, it’s absolutely essential to restore blood
flow as quickly as possible. In heart attacks this
is usually achieved mechanically by inserting a stent into the blocked coronary
artery. But clots can also occur in arteries to
other organs such as the brain, which can cause a stroke. In these cases a clot-busting drug is
injected, but the high doses can cause potentially life-threatening
bleeding.
“This new technology releases a
small dose of the drug where it’s needed and may lead to more
effective clot removal with less risk of
bleeding.”
This study was published online in the
journal Science.