Mobile microwave-based diagnosis and monitoring of stroke and traumatic brain injury - on the road towards improved stroke/trauma triage/care and prehospital initiation of thrombolytic treatment
Research Project, 2015 – 2017

Stroke ranks third among reasons for acute death, first for neurological dysfunction, and is considered the most costly disease in western world health care. Approx 85% of all strokes are ischemic (IS; obstructed blood flow), for which early intravenous thrombolysis is an established procedure. However, only a fraction of patients that could benefit from such treatment actually receives it. Before administering thrombolytic treatment, intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) as an alternative stroke mechanism needs to be ruled out with a brain scan, calling for time-consuming transport to hospitals. Today, the majority of stroke patients reach a diagnosis to late to be safely treated with thrombolysis. After several years of computer modelling and phantom experiments, our research group has recently published two clinical proof-of-concept studies demonstrating that microwave-based brain tomography (MBT) can differentiate ICH from IS in stroke patients. The relative simplicity of this technique makes it possible to perform in ambulances and other pre-hospital environments. We are now planning several multi-center studies with national and international partners, involving both ambulance- and hospital-based MBT instruments, testing the diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of this pioneering technique for identifying ICH. Our aim is to improve triage and treatment of stroke and TBI patients, one ultimate goal being to enable safe pre-hospital initiation of trombolytic treatment.

Participants

Stefan Candefjord (contact)

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

Collaborations

University of Gothenburg

Gothenburg, Sweden

Funding

Swedish Research Council (VR)

Project ID: 2014-7116
Funding Chalmers participation during 2015–2017

More information

Latest update

2016-05-08