A new noninvasive technology  developed by a University of Colorado professor could soon give doctors  real-time information about blood flow and artery blockages, vital details needed  to treat patients suffering from stroke and other vascular disease symptoms.
Robin  Shandas, a mechanical engineering professor at CU-Boulder and a professor  of pediatrics and cardiology at the University of Colorado Denver, invented a  technology that uses ultrasound and FDA-approved "microbubbles" to track blood  flow.
Under an exclusive licensing  agreement announced on June 23, Illumasonix LLC, a Colorado-based medical device  company, will develop Shandas' technology and take it to market as early as  2011. Allied  Minds formed Illumasonix in 2007 with undisclosed initial capitalization  and research funding and $250,000 in matching state funds.
The CU Technology Transfer Office,  which announced the licensing agreement, said Shandas' invention offers a new medical  diagnostic tool that combines the high resolution of magnetic resonance imaging  (MRI) with the ease of use and speed of ultrasound. The technology  will be especially beneficial to doctors treating patients suffering from  stroke and other vascular diseases.
Earlier this year, Illumasonix  reported positive initial results from its ongoing human feasibility study of  Shandas' technology, and anticipates its first product offering in early 2011. Allied  Minds Vice President Erick Rabins, who also manages Illumasonix, said the  technology would provide a substantially more accurate and predictive way to  assess cardiovascular health than current treatment methods.
"We believe it will become the  primary tool used to determine when and if surgical intervention is required,"  he told the Technology Transfer Office.
First developed in the mid-1990s, microbubble technology has been touted as a revolutionary medical treatment for a broad  spectrum of fields such as gene therapy and chemotherapy. The tiny bubbles form  when doctors mix an oily solution and inject the frothy result into the  bloodstream. When ultrasound is applied, the bubbles display clear pictures of organs,  offering doctors insight into a patient's internal health.
The scans, which are available  in a matter of minutes, are said to be less expensive than CT scans and MRI  images, which can take hours to develop. In recent years, doctors have also  explored the use of microbubble technology for targeted drug therapy  treatments, eliminating the need to bombard a patient's entire body with a drug  and reducing the risk of side effects.
Cardiovascular and  neurovascular diseases affect millions of people each year. Stroke is the  third-leading cause of death and disability in the United States, and health  care professionals often use the axiom "time is brain" to impress the  importance of early treatment for stroke patients. In some cases, even the  smallest lag in treatment can lead to brain damage, paralysis or death. According  to the American Heart Association, stroke warning  signs include sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding, trouble  seeing in one or both eyes, and dizziness or loss of balance.