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Some experts worry that some patients and doctors may take their time treating strokes given the extra window.
"It is very clear that our focus must remain on the door-to-needle time. Every minute matters during a stroke," Dr. Patrick Lyden, head of the University of California, San Diego stroke center, wrote in an accompanying editorial.
Stroke neurologist Dr. Walter Koroshetz of the National Institutes of Health said treatment guidelines deserve a fresh look "to try to break this three-hour barrier."
Koroshetz said it's not clear which patients might benefit most from the extra time. Since the European study focused on mild stroke cases, it's unknown if severe stroke victims would also benefit, he said.
Dr. Kenneth Gaines, stroke director at New Orlean's Ochsner Medical Center, said he might be more willing to consider giving TPA in borderline cases. But he remained concerned about the bleeding side effects.
"The real solution is to move faster," Gaines said. "There is diminishing return the longer you delay treatment."
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On the Net:
NEJM: http://content.nejm.org/
American Stroke Association: http://www.strokeassociation.org/
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