Photo: UNC Health Care

Dr. Stephen Moll

Dr. Stephan Moll of the University of North Carolina recently helped save a patient suffering from a blood clot. While that may be par for the course for most doctors, what made this case unique was that Moll’s patient was 250 miles above Earth.

“So I picked up the phone, and NASA was on the phone and said it was urgent,” he recalled to the news station.

“It was surprising, it was an honor,” Moll added. “I was curious to see where that would lead.”

The agency had never experienced a blood clot problem in space before and had no protocol on how to deal with one, WRAL reported.

“So all the decisions that had to be made were best guesses,” Moll said.

The professor worked with a team of NASA doctors to devise a spur-of-the-moment treatment for the astronaut, whose name was not publicized for privacy reasons.

NASA HANDOUT/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

all female spacewalk

The team worried that if they didn’t find a solution quickly, the clot could spread to the astronaut’s lungs or brains.

While blood clots are usually treated with anticoagulants, according toCleveland Clinic, Moll was unsure if the medication would work the same in space.

“I needed to weigh the risk-benefit of starting a blood thinner or not starting a blood thinner,” he recalled.

Fortunately, the space station had blood thinners on hand. While they only had a small supply, it was enough to get the job done.

Earth from space.NASA/AP/Shutterstock

Hurricane Dorian

While he wasn’t able to visit space to tend to his patient, Moll was treated to a phone call from the grateful astronaut.

“My wife picked up and it was from the International Space Station, and she handed the phone to me and said, ‘There is someone from outer space who wants to talk to you,'” Moll told WRAL. “The connection was incredibly good. It was actually without any delay. This is amazing because the ISS moves at 17-18,000 miles an hour.”

The astronaut has since returned to Earth and has recovered.

source: people.com