{"id":1287605,"date":"2020-01-24T08:24:10","date_gmt":"2020-01-24T13:24:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/xy-yishc.shop\/?p=1287605"},"modified":"2020-01-24T13:48:55","modified_gmt":"2020-01-24T18:48:55","slug":"nebraska-stroke-device","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/xy-yishc.shop\/2020\/01\/24\/nebraska-stroke-device\/","title":{"rendered":"Nebraska researchers develop device to mitigate effects of a stroke: BTN LiveBIG"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Every year, more than 795,000 Americans have a stroke, according to Center of Disease Control and Prevention. Almost 90 percent of those are considered ischemic strokes, a condition where an obstruction in one?s artery prevents blood from flowing to the brain.<\/p>\n
At the University of Nebraska<\/a>, researchers Steven Barlow and Greg Bashford have developed technology that can simulate the blood flow to areas of the body that are generally impacted by an ischemic stroke.<\/p>\n The pair, along with the help of graduate students, created a somatosensory stimulator, which can increase the velocity of blood flow up to 20 percent. For a victim of an ischemic stroke, that amount of blood coming back to the brain can be the difference between life and death.<\/p>\n ?Our brains need blood,? says Bashford, a professor in the Biological Systems Engineering Department<\/a> and faculty affiliate at Nebraska?s Center for Brain, Biology and Behavior<\/a>. ?Our brains are made up of cells like every other tissue in the body, and these cells are little cities. They are little powerhouses that work. They need oxygen, they need food. Blood is what brings those nutrients and oxygen to the brain.<\/p>\n When that doesn?t happen, brain cells die quickly. That?s a big problem as neurons do not regenerate. Millions of neurons die every minute that blood flow is blocked.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n