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New Brunswick

A stroke of luck: 'Miracle man' Bruce Hughes survives series of strokes

A procedure performed at the Saint John Regional Hospital saved an Upper Keswick man who suffered a series of strokes.

Procedure performed in Saint John saves life of 59-year-old musician from Upper Keswick

Stroke survivor Bruce Hughes says he isn't the miracle the doctors and nurses who saved him are. (CBC)

Bruce Hughes should have died.

His nurses said he was a "miracle man," and his neurologist says there is something to that.

Hughes, 59, of Upper Keswick, had a series of strokes caused by two large blood clots. One was in the artery that brings blood flow to the brain.

He received the standard clot-busting drug,tissue plasminogen activator(tPA), but his Fredericton neurologist didn't think it was going to be enough.

So she sent him to Saint John, where a team of radiologists and nurses were able to perform an infrequent procedure that removed the clots and set Hughes on the road to recovery.

Atypical symptoms

It all started on May 31.

"I had been on the couch for a couple of days, I thought I just had the flu or an ear infection or cold coming, hadn't been feeling well, my neck was bothering me a little bit, and I went to get up and lost my balance," says Hughes, a retired educator and musician of 35 years.

His wife Monica called 911. But by the time the ambulance arrived, Hughes was feeling better better than he had in two or three days.

"They did all the vitals, they couldn't find anything wrong with me, so we all figured it was just an inner ear infection or something like that."

The ambulance leftadecision that could have cost him his lifebecause during a stroke, time is everything.

Time = brain cells

Neurologist Dr. Hanni Bouma knew the clot-busting drug tPA wouldn't be enough to save Hughes. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)

"Time is brain," his neurologist Dr.HanniBoumaexplains. From the moment the stroke hits, the clock is running.

"We know that for every one minute that passes after a stroke begins, you lose about twomillion brain cells. So 15 minute delay adds up to a lot of brain cells [lost] and that translates into a lot of disability,"Boumasays.

After collapsing a second time, a second ambulance was called, and rushed Hughes to the emergency department around 11:30 a.m.

But hissymptoms weren't typical of a stroke.

"And they got me in there, and then it was just chaos to me," he says.

"I just remember 10 or 12 faces around my bed, all trying to figure out what the heck was going on here, because I was coming in and out of stroke. My whole right side would drop out, slurred speech and everything, then I would sit right up and be normal."

Bruce Hughes's post-stroke brain scan on the right shows, between red arrows, where the dye didn't penetrate the blood clot. The scan on the left was taken after the clot cleared. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)

Bouma was called in around 2:30 p.m.She determined it was a stroke, then a CT scan confirmed it.

Normallythe clot-busting drugtPA, which can cause bleeding in the brain, is only given if the patient is within the four-hour window. With Hughes, however, Bouma knew he would die if nothing was done.

"We started the tPA, [intubatedhim and]got things rolling for transfer to Saint John," says Bouma, because she knew the drug wouldn't be enough to save Hughes.

"All that probably took about 45 minutes, which is pretty fast actually."

Watching the clock

Interventional radiologists Dr. Jake Swan and Dr. Brian Archer were waiting at the Saint John Regional Hospital.

The hospital has a team of doctors and nurses who have been performing mechanical thrombectomies for nearly fiveyears.

Simply said, it is the direct removal of a clot by mechanical means, as opposed to being dissolved by drugs. Team members do about one a weekbut would like to see more stroke patients sent their way who could benefit from the procedure.

'Miracle man' Bruce Hughes survives massive stroke

7 years ago
Duration 1:17
Hughes, 59, of Upper Keswick, had a series of strokes caused by two large blood clots. He should have died, but survived to tell his story.

The team started working on Hughes at 5:59 p.m.

"The critical thing is getting blood flow open to that artery as fast as you can," says Archer.

"You need to get up with a catheter into the brain," he says, while demonstrating with a thin, blue tube that he threads with another tube.As he pushes it through, a stent extrudes. Stents are like small, mesh tubes, used to hold arteries open after a heart attack.

"We went up through the blocked artery, which we had to fix on the way outto where the clot was, put a big catheter in it, and just sucked all that clot outpulled it down out of his brain, and got perfect flow back," says Archer.

"Then the blockage lower down in the artery needed to be stented open with the same equipment you would use to treat a heart attack."

By 6:21 p.m., they were done.

Radiologist remembers clearing 'Lucky Bruce's' clot during risky intervention

7 years ago
Duration 1:08
Radiologist Dr. Brian Archer smiles at the memory of clearing Bruce Hughes' clot and restoring blood flow to his brain.

Archer smiles when he remembers seeing Hughes's scan after the procedure.

"There's not a formal cheer, but there's a, 'Yes!' You see the picture after the clot is gone and go, 'Oh, thank you!' And you realize, 'OK, now I've done as much as I can do.'"

Doctors won't know if they got the clots early enough until Hughes wakes up the next morning.

Miracleman

Hughes was awakened the next morning.

"Everything was paralyzed and nothing worked at first at all, and I was very scared," he says.

"And then within a couple of hours, my left side came back pretty good, but nothing on my right. But I just lay there and willed my elbow to move. I just stared at it for about four hours, and then it finally moved."

The 3D image on the right shows Bruce Hughes's brain after the procedure that sucked out two clots and repaired a tear in his vertebral artery in the shoulder-neck area. (Catherine Harrop/CBC)
Hughes says the doctors were shocked at the speed he regained the connections between his brain and his body. In fact, one night he opened his eyes to a nurse who was at the foot of his bed. She said she had just come to see the man the other nurses were calling, "the miracle man."

"I think that, even from a medical point of view, he has had quite a remarkable outcome," Bouma, his neurologist, says. "It's way beyond what I could've expected.

"I've really never seen anybody do as well from this type of stroke. So I do kind of agree with that, with that idea, that [he] is a bit of a miracle man."

Hughes loves to talk and hates to sit still.Both things are working in his favour. He continues to do everything possible in physiotherapy and occupational therapy. But as for the description "miracle man," he says he isn't the miracle.

"It was a complicated procedure and I think just, 'Wow, these guys are just like master mechanics.' They found somewhere else for a spark plug to go in that normally doesn't, and luckily it saved my life.

"So I'm thankful. I'm not the miracle, they are."

In September, just over threemonths after having his strokes, Hughes played his guitar for the reunion of his old group, Blind Dog, at the Harvest Jazz and Blues Festival. He says he didn't play that well, and only threesongs, but he was there.