Health

Hope for brain stroke patients: How a stent can clear blood clots in 24 hours

Hope for brain stroke patients: How a stent can clear blood clots in 24 hours

Apr 12, 2025 | 1123 Views

For sometime now, brain stroke patients in the West could avert brain damage as neurosurgeons used a sophisticated retriever stent to clear the blood clot from blocked arteries and restore blood flow within 24 hours. However, this device is out of reach for most Indians despite brain strokes increasing among them. That’s all set to change with the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi, now conducting a trial with an upgraded device that’s equipped to remove all kinds of blood clots, is better at opening blocked arteries and may cost one-fourth the original price.1 The clinical trial, GRASSROOT (Gravity Stent-Retriever System for Reperfusion of Large Vessel Occlusion Stroke Trial), is looking at the effectiveness and accessibility of a new generation of advanced stent-retriever devices that can be used in mechanical thrombectomy, a minimally invasive stroke surgery to clear artery blockage in the brain. According to Dr Shailesh Gaikwad, professor and head, Department of Neuroimaging and Interventional Neuroradiology, Neurosciences Centre, AIIMS, and one of the investigators of the trial, “We are finding out how the device works on the Indian population. The new stent-retriever has been designed specifically to tackle the unique features of a stroke clot in the Indian population, given that our arteries are narrower.” The new device was first used on August 25. The patient is doing well.

As Vistara flies into the sunset today, its legacy sets a benchmark for enlarged Air India

As Vistara flies into the sunset today, its legacy sets a benchmark for enlarged Air India

Apr 12, 2025 | 854 Views

In its one decade of operations, Vistara made a mark for its product and service quality as India’s foremost full-service carrier, setting itself apart in a market dominated by no-frills airlines. The airline will fly its final flight on Monday before its merges with Tata group’s flagship carrier Air India on Tuesday. It would not be an understatement to say that Vistara was able to carve a unique space for itself in the mind of the Indian flyer, which is evident from flyers’ reactions on social media, many brimming with nostalgia. The wheels for the merger were set in motion in 2022 after the tata group acquired Air India from the government. Singapore Airlines, which held a 49 per cent stake in Vistara, will own 25.1 per cent of Air India following the merger.