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Newswise Columbus, OH. Dr. Cameron Rink is pointing at a picture of a brain in the middle of a stroke. Dark feathery arteries branch across grayish brain tissue, some of which has faded into black around the obstructed blood vessels, looking like a city block thats lost power while the rest glows on.
That part of the brain is not getting blood or oxygen and the cells are dying. Theres not much we can do for a patient at this point and thats frustrating, says Rink, a professor of surgery at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.
His frustration is well founded. After 25 years and the failure of more than 1,000 experimental neuroprotective drugs, only aspirin and tPA, the clot-busting drug are currently available to patients after theyve had stroke and tPA can only be used in about 4% of all stroke cases.
Convinced that the after the fact approach to stroke doesnt do enough to prevent disability and death, for the past 12 years, Rink has focused his research on stroke prevention research that is beginning to pay off.
In published animal studies, Rink's lab has discovered that brain damage during a stroke can be prevented by triggering the surrounding blood vessels to dilate and redirect the blood flow around a blockage.
The blood vessel redirect is the result of 10 weeks worth of supplementation with a little-known type of vitamin E called tocotrienol. Tocotrienol appears to stimulate arteriogenesis or the remodeling of existing blood vessels that can instantaneously expand in response to a demand for oxygen-rich blood. This collateral blood supply can make a major difference in stroke outcomes.
We know that people who have good collaterals have better recovery from strokes. We think that tocotrienol helps improve the function of collaterals, which would offer someone better protection from an initial or secondary stroke, says Rink, who is currently participating in a study of stroke survivors to see if the supplement can help prevent or reduce damage from secondary strokes which can often be more disabling and costly than the first stroke.
To find out exactly how tocotrienol is impacting blood vessel remodeling, Rink pioneered a technique using laser capture microdissection (LCM) to take microscopic pieces of brain tissue and blood vessels from the exact area where collaterals are called into action during a stroke.
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Brain Saver: Vitamin E Supplement Helps "Redirect" Blood During a Stroke