View clinical trials related to Ischemia.
Filter by:Evaluation of the safety and tolerability of escalating doses of NR1 administered intracerebrally at a single time-point post-injury to subjects with chronic ISS with or without cortical stroke.
It is known that atrial fibrillation after stroke significantly increases the risk of stroke or systemic embolism. Accordingly, efforts have been made to detect hidden atrial fibrillation and apply treatment using anticoagulants instead of antiplatelet agents. The conventional method used to screen for atrial fibrillation in stroke patients who did not have atrial fibrillation at first admission is 24-hour Holter monitoring. This study will compare the detection rate of atrial fibrillation with discontinuous ECG monitoring three times a day and 72 hours of single-lead ECG patch monitoring compared with the conventional Holter test.
Acute limb ischemia (ALI) is a sudden decrease in limb perfusion due to either an embolic or a thrombotic vascular occlusion, defined as the presence of symptoms within two weeks of onset. The profound ischemia represents an emergency in which delayed treatment results in limb loss and, potentially, death. Therefore, timely diagnosis and proper treatments for ALI are important. Both surgical thrombectomy and endovascular treatment have benefits and drawbacks. Surgical thrombectomy using Fogarty embolectomy catheter has been the standard therapy because it is rapid and effective in cases of embolic ALI. However, blind surgical thrombectomy can result in poor revascularization or unexpected vascular injury in the presence of underlying arterial atherosclerosis or in the presence of subacute and chronic thrombi. In addition, thrombosis of runoff vessels is difficult to remove. Endovascular management using catheter-directed thrombolysis (CDT) has emerged as an alternative to surgery. It is less invasive, and does not directly damage the vascular endothelium with the capacity to clear thrombus in the small vessels. However, long treatment duration may worsen the clinical situation. Besides, a thrombus of more than two weeks does not respond well to the thrombolysis, and it is difficult to determine the exact stage of thrombus according to the clinical history. These problems may be minimized by combined treatment, which includes surgical thrombectomy and endovascular treatment.
This is a pilot, monocentric clinical investigation to evaluate the suitability of StrokeWave in distinguishing haemorragic from ischaemic strokes. The StrokeWave is a microwave device which employs a novel technique to generate images by processing very low power (<1mW) microwaves. The trial design has been developed in order not to interfere with thw standard diagnostic approach used for the hyperacute stroke patients, nor to modify the usual standard timing of the routine assessment.
This study is aimed to establish reference intervals of NOAC (dabigatran, apixaban and rivaroxaban) in ethnic Chinese patients.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a single intravenous administration of JTR-161 (allogeneic stem cell product derived from the dental pulp of healthy adult humans) to patients with acute ischemic stroke. This study is comprised of 3 cohorts and conducted in the order of Cohort 1, Cohort 2 and Cohort 3. Cohort 1 Arm-1: JTR-161, 1 × 10^8 cells/subject, 6 subjects Arm-2: Placebo, 2 subjects The Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DSMB) and the Sponsor will decide whether Cohort 2 can be initiated or not. Cohort 2 Arm-1: JTR-161, 3 × 10^8 cells/subject, 6 subjects Arm-2: Placebo, 2 subjects DSMB and the Sponsor will decide whether Cohort 3 can be initiated or not and the dose of JTR-161 in Cohort 3. Cohort 3 Arm-1: JTR-161, 1 × 10^8 cells/subject or 3 × 10^8 cells/subject, 30 subjects Arm-2: Placebo, 30 subjects
This study is aimed to depict the epidemiological trend, aetiologies, clinical characteristics, treatment options of IS-NOAC in face of the rapidly increasing NOAC usage. Knowledge on this ischaemic stroke entity will define clinical characteristics, identify preventable causes and inform resource allocation on the evaluation modalities, reperfusion strategies and forecast future burden of IS-NOAC.
Early outcome prediction after ischemic stroke (IS) is of great importance. Prognosis is usually based on clinical variables and neuroradiological findings while serum biomarkers may contribute to prognostic accuracy. Inflammatory biomarker Suppression of Tumorigenicity 2 (ST2) has been shown as promising in IMU outcome predicting. The relationship between ST2 serum values and IS severity is not fully clarified. The proposed hypothesis is that earlier releasing and higher ST2 serum concentrations will be associated with a worse IS outcome. In this prospective and observational study 20 patients with IS will be included and followed. The primary outcome is functional outcome according to the modified Ranking scale at 90 days. In case of hypothesis confirmation, theoretical contribution will be in a better understanding of pathophysiological changes in acute phase of IS, while the clinical purpose is to improve the prognostic procedure.
The objective of this study is to compare the remote patency of paclitaxel versus sirolimus eluting balloons in patients with CLI undergoing tibial artery revascularization. Patients will be randomized 1:1 to Paclitaxel eluting balloon (Litos, ACOTEC ltd) or sirolimus eluting balloon (Magic touch, Concept Medical) after optimal balloon angioplasty. The primary endpoint of the study is the late luminal loss at 6 months angiography. Secondary endpoint are major amputation, clinically driven target lesion revascularization and vessel reocclusion (duplex) at 12 months.
A recent study, where the authors studied the effectiveness of stenting of prolonged lesions (>200 mm) of the femoral-popliteal segment with nitinol stents (TASC II, D), showed unsatisfactory primary patency rates (45%) within 2 years follow up (Lin et al, 2015). One of the possible solutions to the problem of breakage of stents in the femoral-popliteal position is a modified method of their manufacture by braiding from nitinol wire. Another possible solution to the problem of stent breakage in the femoral-popliteal position is fasciotomy in Gunter's canal with dissection of the lamina vasto-adductoria. According to a pilot randomized study (Karpenko et al, 2019), the primary patency at 24 months was 60% in the stenting group supplemented with fasciotomy in Gunter's canal, and 28.5% in the stenting group without fasciotomy. These facts prove the need for a comparative study on a cohort of patients using a biomimetic interwoven nitinol stent. This is a pilot prospective, randomized, open-label study. The main objective of the study is to compare the clinical efficacy and safety of two methods of treating prolonged atherosclerotic lesions (TASC II, type D) of the arteries of the femoropopliteal segment above the knee.