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Cheap "eye movement" exam 'best bet' for diagnosing stroke in patients with dizziness

Washington, Sept 19 (ANI): Researchers at Johns Hopkins and the University of Illinois have found that a simple, one-minute eye movement exam performed at the bedside worked better than an MRI to distinguish new strokes from other less serious disorders in patients complaining of dizziness, nausea and spinning sensations.

The small "proof of principle" study included 101 patients, who were already at higher than normal risk of stroke because of factors including high blood pressure or high cholesterol. The patients were all seen at OSF St. Francis Medical Center in Peoria, Ill.

The research published online ahead of print on Sept. 17 in Stroke.

The project, spearheaded by a Johns Hopkins neurologist in collaboration with colleagues at the University of Illinois in Peoria, found that the quick, extremely low-cost exam caught more strokes than the current gold standard of MRI, suggesting that if further research on broader populations confirms these results, physicians may have a way to improve care and avoid the high costs of MRI in some cases.

"The idea that a bedside exam could outperform a modern neuroimaging test such as MRI is something that most people had given up for dead, but we've shown it's possible," says David E. Newman-Toker, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of neurology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Dizziness is a common medical problem, Newman-Toker says. While the vast majority of dizziness complaints are caused by benign inner-ear balance problems, about 4 percent are signals of stroke or transient ischemic attack.

Because more than half of patients with dizziness who are experiencing strokes show none of the classic stroke symptoms - one-sided weakness, numbness, or speech problems - emergency room physicians are estimated to misdiagnose at least a third of them, losing the chance for quick and effective treatment.

"We know that time is brain, so when patients having a stroke are sent home erroneously, the consequences can be really serious, including death or permanent disability," says Jorge C. Kattah, M.D., chairman of neurology at OSF St. Francis Medical Center, who co-led the study. (ANI)

Cheap paint to protect against high-speed wireless developed

London, Jan 20 (ANI): Researchers from University of Tokyo have developed a new metal-rich coating, which will protect sensitive equipments in medical areas, labs, or aeroplanes from the effects of high-speed wireless communications.The new wireless communications use electromagnetic waves with a frequency of over 100 gigahertz, but the best wave absorbers commercially available are effective only up to around half that, reports New Scientist.The wave absorbers can block electromagnetic (EM) waves when a material's magnetic field resonates at.....
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