Medical device startup Forest Devices finds local fit with stroke detection tech

October 6, 2016  |  Meghan LeVota

Matt Kesinger

Editor’s note: This content is sponsored by LaunchKC but independently produced by Startland News.


 

Everyone who goes into medicine is motivated, in part, by their desire to reduce pain and suffering.

That desire is what pushed Matt Kesinger to go to medical school.

In 2009, Kesinger worked as an emergency medical technician in Boston. His first month on the job, he was flabbergasted to find that he failed to detect a stroke in one of his patients.

“I took it really hard at first,” Kesinger said. “I didn’t realize how absolutely common it was to miss a stroke.”

After conducting national scale research, Kesinger learned that half of all strokes — when blood flow to an area of brain is cut off — are undetected before the patient’s arrival at the hospital. Without methods of early detection, Kesinger said strokes lead to thousands of deaths and billions in unnecessary annual costs.

Kesinger examined a plethora of technologies to tackle the problem. After a single “eureka moment,” he realized that the technologies to more effectively detect strokes already existed but that it had yet to be commercialized.

“I believe the efforts I am doing with Forest Devices will impact a lot more people than what I could do in an emergency department.” – Matt Kesinger

At that moment, Kesinger transformed from medicine man to an entrepreneur. And In 2015, Kesinger launched Forest Devices, a medical device startup that is currently developing a stroke screening device called AlphaStroke.

“AlphaStroke is basically an EKG (electrocardiogram) for the brain,” said Kesinger, a co-founder of Forrest Devices. “We’re looking at brain signals and asymmetry. A stroke only happens on one side of the brain, and AlphaStroke can pick up that asymmetry within 60 seconds.”

Via a few electrodes placed on a patient’s head, the AlphaStroke device measures asymmetry in brain waves and oxygen levels in the brain, which allows an EMT to detect a stroke in about one minute. If the AlphaStroke detects a stroke, it allows a medical professional to more quickly transport the patient to a stroke treatment center rather than a hospital that may not be suitable for care.

Kesinger estimates that early treatment of a stroke can prevent up to 6,000 deaths and 300,000 hospital days per year.

Already in a working relationship with Kansas City-based Truman Medical Center, Kesinger said they are seeking various partnership opportunities throughout the Midwest, as well as fundraising. With a team of 6 full-time employees, Kesinger said that monetizing AlphaStroke and reaching FDA approval is still a couple years into the horizon.

Kesinger traveled to Kansas City in September for Techweek, and the firm came home with a $50,000 grant from LaunchKC, along with local office space. Forest Devices is headquartered in Pittsburgh, Pa., but thanks to Kansas City’s central location and proximity to stroke centers, Kesinger believes Kansas City is apt for its expansion.

Kesinger said that the firm’s ultimate mission is to put an AlphaStroke in every ambulance around the nation.

“The reason I am not practicing medicine right now is because I believe the efforts I am doing with Forest Devices will impact a lot more people than what I could do in an emergency department,” Kesinger said. “Although I wish I was drawing the salary that I would be drawing over there — money isn’t everything.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Dusty Birge, Snappy Workflow

        Snappy Workflow closes $1M round with electric backing from Nebraska investors

        By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2022

        Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. KEARNEY,…

        C2FO primes for global expansion with C-suite adds; new CFO joins from post-IPO SelectQuote

        By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2022

        Editor’s note: C2FO is a financial partner of Startland News. Two new C-suite appointments to C2FO’s leadership team come as the Kansas City-based startup swells to record funding activity and projects new phases for its global expansion and growth. Ragui Selwanes, a veteran tech executive, joins C2FO as chief product and technology officer, a newly…

        Black & Veatch investing $50K in CAPS network, hoping to unite corporate champions amid lagging labor market

        By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2022

        One of the earliest supporters of the Center for the Advanced Professional Studies (CAPS) is stepping up again to set the tone for foundational corporate backing as the Johnson County-spun experiential learning effort scales across North America. CAPS announced Monday a $50,000 investment from Black & Veatch to further long-term employment solutions for the engineering…

        ‘Cyderes’ emerges from Fishtech, Herjavec merger; new cybersecurity powerhouse aims to reshape market

        By Tommy Felts | June 7, 2022

        Editor’s note: Cyderes is a financial partner of Startland News, supporting Community Builders to Watch and Startland News Live. Security stakes are at an all-time high, said Robert Herjavec, star of ABC’s “Shark Tank” and CEO of the newly announced Cyderes — a rebranded cybersecurity leader with its sights set no lower than becoming the new…