New Procedure Offers Hope to Patients at High Risk for Recurrent Stroke
-
$4 Million Gift Helps Create New Center for Inflammatory Bowel Disease at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell
-
Adolescent Girl Athletes More Likely to Injure Knees Than Boys
-
Americans Encouraged to Make Many Lifestyle Changes, Not Just One, to Reduce Cardiovascular Risk
-
A Shot in the Arm Could Save Your Child's Life
-
Avon Foundation Breast Imaging Center and Research Lab Open at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and Columbia University Medical Center
-
Breathe Easier! Family Guide to Winter Allergies
-
Common Sense and Care: Tips for Holiday Fire Prevention
-
Comprehensive Care for Complex, High-Risk Pregnancies
-
Comprehensive Review Finds Job Stress Does Not Contribute to Chronic High Blood Pressure
-
Contrary to Popular Wisdom, Expressing Anger Is Not Healthy
-
Diabetics Benefit Less from Anti-Hypertensive Treatment to Reduce Enlarged Heart
-
DNA Analysis Could Boost Accuracy of Thyroid Tests, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Team Reports
-
Dr. Jack Barchas Receives Institute of Medicine's 2006 Sarnat Award in Mental Health
-
Dr. Joseph Tenenbaum Named New Chief of Medicine Division at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/The Allen Pavilion
-
Dr. Laura Forese, Chief Medical Officer, Appointed Chief Operating Officer of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell
-
Dr. Richard Polin Receives Education Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics
-
Dr. Scott Hammer Authors Two New Guidelines for HIV Treatment
-
Electrocardiogram Helps Predict Risk for Congestive Heart Failure in Hypertensive Patients
-
Female Smokers Face Double the Risk for Lung Cancer Compared to Male Smokers, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Study Finds
-
For High Blood Pressure Patients, Preventing or Reducing Enlarged Heart Decreases Risk of Deadly Atrial Fibrillation
-
Four-Drug Combo Is No Improvement Over Standard Three-Drug Regimen in Suppressing HIV, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell-Led Study Finds
-
Fritz Reuter Appointed SVP for Facilities Development and Real Estate at NewYork-Presbyterian
-
From Ancient Egypt to the Science Lab to Your Dinner Plate... Garlic: It's Good for You!
-
Greenberg Prize Awarded to Dr. Isadore Rosenfeld
-
Halloween Horror Movies May Cause Emotional Problems in Young Children
-
How to Avoid Holiday and Winter Weight Gain
-
Improved Treatment for Infants with Misshapen Heads
-
Integrative Therapies Program for Children with Cancer at Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of NewYork-Presbyterian Receives Gift Commitment from Origins Natural Resources
-
IVIG Antibodies Provide Lasting Benefits to Alzheimer's Patients, According to NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Study
-
Keeping the Beat: NewYork-Presbyterian Offers Heart Patients New Combination Defibrillator/Pacemakers
-
Landmark Study Reveals That Lung Cancer 10-Year Survival Dramatically Improves With Annual CT Screening and Prompt Treatmen
-
Larger Waistline Is Linked to Increased Risk for Heart Disease in Women
-
Largest U.S. Hepatitis C Trial Provides Insight Into Optimizing Treatment for Patients
-
Latest Findings Presented at Second International Symposium on Pediatric Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma
-
Learning from 9/11: NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Study Reviews Hospital's Disaster Preparedness
-
Lending a Helping Hand: New Device for Stroke Patients Restores Hand Mobility
-
Local Pediatric Patient Heads to Capitol Hill Today in Hopes of Preserving Children's Hospital Funding
-
Merry Stressmas
-
Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital Appoints Emergency Medicine Doctors
-
Most Children with First Complex Febrile Seizures Unlikely to Need Emergency Neuroimaging
-
Multiple Myeloma Oral Therapy REVLIMID Approved by FDA
-
New Alternative to Hip Replacement
-
New Columbia University Division of Geriatric Medicine and Aging to Open at NewYork-Presbyterian/The Allen Pavilion
-
New Procedure Offers Hope to Patients at High Risk for Recurrent Stroke
-
New Radiation Therapy for Prostate Cancer Has Fewer Side Effects
-
New Studies Offer Virtual Reality Therapy for Psychological Victims of Sept. 11
-
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Announces State-of-the-Art, Vivian and Seymour Milstein Family Heart Center in Washington Heights
-
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Physician has Developed a Potential Nonsurgical Alternative to Mitral Valve Surgery
-
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Sets U.S. Record for Number of Heart Transplants in One Year
-
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Trains Surgeons in New Alternative to Hip Replacement
-
NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Names Dr. Nitsana Spigland Chief of Pediatric Surgery
-
NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Physicians are the First to Test Gene Therapy as a Potential Treatment for Parkinson's Disease
-
NewYork-Presbyterian's Back-To-School Health Checklist
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Launches Awareness Campaign for Interpreter Services Program
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Names Dr. Robert Grant Chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Ranks #1 in New York Magazine's Best Hospitals Survey
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Ranks 6th in Nation in 2006 U.S. News & World Report "Best Hospitals"
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Receives Highest Accreditation for Bariatric Surgery
-
NewYork-Presbyterian Receives NY State Stroke Center Designation
-
No Tricks – Just Treats!
-
Novel Drug Boosts Platelet Production, Reversing Chronic Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)
-
Nurses Name Physicians of the Year at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell
-
NYC's First 3-Way Kidney Transplant
-
NYC Conference on Medical Interpreting and Culturally Competent Health Care
-
NYC First: NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Cardiologists Implant Novel Stroke-Prevention Device for Heart Patients with Atrial Fibrillation
-
Parents Happier with Alternative to Liquid Meds for Tonsillectomy
-
Researcher Predicts Paradigm Shift in Heart Disease Treatment
-
Responding to Obesity Epidemic, New Adolescent Bariatric Surgery Center Opens at Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital of NewYork-Presbyterian
-
Review Outlines Risks and Benefits of Body Contouring for Massive Weight Loss After Bariatric Surgery
-
Smokers and Former Smokers Should Be Screened for Lung Cancer, Even If They do not Have Symptoms
-
Surgery Simulators Effective at Training Surgeons
-
Take Me to Chicago!
-
The Facts and Fictions About Flu and Colds
-
The Seventh Issue of Cancer Prevention Has Arrived!
-
Tired of Scratching?
-
Two-Drug Therapy Could Become New Standard of Care for Moderate-to-Severe Male Overactive Bladder
-
U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services Commends Mental Health Program at NewYork-Presbyterian
-
Winter Exercise Warning
-
Winter Watch for Senior Citizens: 10 Tips for Having a Safe Season
Surgeons at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center are the first in the New York City metropolitan area to successfully implant into the brain arteries a new stent specifically designed to treat high-risk stroke patients who have not previously responded to medical therapy. The Wingspan™ Stent System is used for those individuals diagnosed with intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD) excess plaque buildup in the brain arteries.
The intracranial stenting procedure involves making a small incision in the patient's femoral artery. The device is threaded through the patient's vessels to the location of plaque in the cerebral vessel. A balloon is then expanded to crack the plaque and withdrawn, and the stent is inserted and deployed to open the vessel.
"Stents, which are thin, wire-mesh tubes, have long been used to successfully open the carotid arteries in the neck to prevent stroke. Now they are being used in a similar fashion inside the brain," says Dr. Pierre Gobin, professor of radiology and neurological surgery at Weill Medical College of Cornell University and director of the division of interventional neuroradiology at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell. "As opposed to carotid stents that are made of stainless steel, this brain stent is designed specifically for the fragile vessels of the brain."
"Recent research has shown that a very large percentage of patients with plaque buildup in their brains' vessels do not respond to medication," says Dr. Howard A. Riina, associate professor of neurological surgery at Weill Medical College of Cornell University and co-director of the division of interventional neuroradiology at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell. "Without any intervention, these patients have a significant chance of having another stroke within a year."
According to the American Stroke Association, there are about 700,000 strokes cases every year. About 10 percent of strokes are due to problems associated with ICAD.
The device, called the Wingspan™ Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter, is manufactured by Boston Scientific of Natick, Mass. It is the only device of its kind available in the U.S. The FDA granted Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) status in August 2005 to Wingspan based on a multi-center study in Europe and Asia. The study enrolled patients who had a stroke caused by an intracranial lesion and for whom medical treatment failed to prevent another stroke. The device had a procedural success rate of 98 percent.