DiscoverFrom Our Neurons to YoursHow basic science transformed stroke care | Marion Buckwalter
How basic science transformed stroke care | Marion Buckwalter

How basic science transformed stroke care | Marion Buckwalter

Update: 2025-06-26
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A generation ago, a big clot in the brain meant paralysis or worse. Today, doctors can diagnose clots on AI-enabled brain scans; provide life-saving, targeted medications; or snake a catheter from a patient’s groin into the brain to vacuum out the clot. If they intervene in time, they can watch speech and movement return before the sedatives wear off. How did that happen—and what’s still missing?

In this episode of From Our Neurons to Yours, Stanford neuroscientist and neurocritical care specialist Marion Buckwalter, MD, PhD retraces the 70-year chain of curiosity-driven research—biochemistry, imaging, materials science, AI—behind today’s remarkable improvements in stroke care. She also warns what future breakthroughs are at stake if support for basic science stalls.

Learn More

Buckwalter Lab site

History of Stroke Care:

The uncertain future of federal support for science

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How basic science transformed stroke care | Marion Buckwalter

How basic science transformed stroke care | Marion Buckwalter

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute at Stanford University, Nicholas Weiler, Marion Buckwalter