Mark W. Parsons (Australia)

Unuversity of New South Wales Medicine/Neurology
Professor Mark Parsons B.Med (University of Newcastle), PhD (University of Melbourne), FRACP (Neurology), FAHMS (Fellow of the Academy of Australian Health and Medicial Scientists). Professor Parsons is an internationally recognised Neurologist and leader in Stroke Medicine, and a highly sought-after speaker, instructor and mentor, both nationally and internationally, in all aspects of clinical Neuroscience. He has recently been appointed as the new Executive Director of the NHMRC-accredited Advanced Health Research Translation Centre, SPHERE (Sydney Partnership for Health, Education, Research, and Enterprise). He moved to Sydney in 2020 as SHARP Professor of Medicine and Neurology at UNSW South Western Sydney Clinical School, Liverpool Hospital and The Ingham Institute for Applied Medical Research. There, he has established and leads a new Stroke and Neuroscience research team – the Sydney Brain Centre @ The Ingham Institute. He remains as a Professor of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, University of Melbourne. He is also a Conjoint Professor of Neurology at University of Newcastle. He also is a Visiting Professor at Fudan University, Shanghai.

Author Of 2 Presentations

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Session Type
Debate
Date
28.10.2021, Thursday
Session Time
10:00 - 11:30
Room
DEBATES
Lecture Time
10:34 - 10:51

Prehospital Strategies for Brain Hemorrhage Management

Session Type
Plenary Session
Date
28.10.2021, Thursday
Session Time
19:15 - 20:45
Room
PLENARY
Lecture Time
19:57 - 20:11

Abstract

Abstract Body

Mobile stroke units (MSUs) substantially reduce reperfusion therapy times in acute ischemic stroke (AIS). Phase III trials in the USA and Europe have shown that they improve clinical outcomes, compared with standard of care in emergency departments. MSUs are also an ideal platform for treatment of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). The Melbourne MSU has been operational since 2017. In a final diagnosis of stroke, approximately 15% of our cases have intracranial hemorrhages, predominantly ICH, smaller numbers of subarachnoid, subdural and extradural hemorrhages. Around 50% were treated with intravenous anti-hypertensive treatment. Patients were bypassed to a comprehensive stroke centre from the MSU in about one third of cases. Compared to patients with MSU-AIS, patients with ICH had faster onset to emergency call and onset to scene arrival times. We are conducting the STOP-MSU trial which is randomizing patients to tranexamic acid (TXA) versus placebo within 2 hours of the onset of ICH, testing the hypothesis that TXA will reduce ICH growth at 24 hours. This ongoing trial has recruited over 100 patients, about a third from the Melbourne MSU and the remainder from emergency departments in Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, Vietnam and Finland. MSUs can facilitate ultra-early ICH diagnosis, treatment and triage.

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Presenter of 1 Presentation

Negative

Session Type
Debate
Date
28.10.2021, Thursday
Session Time
10:00 - 11:30
Room
DEBATES
Lecture Time
10:34 - 10:51