View clinical trials related to Ischemic Stroke.
Filter by:Patients after stroke with upper limb spasticity treated with botulinum toxin-A (BTX-A) will be included in this two-part study. In the first part, goal attainment scaling and comprehensive assessment of motor functioning will be performed before BTX-A application and after two weeks. In the second part, the patients will be randomised into a test group performing prescribed regular exercise for two weeks and a control group exercising at their own discretion during the same period, whereby the patients' health-related quality of life will be assessed at the beginning and end of the two-week period.
This is a pragmatic, multi-center, prospective, observational, non-interventional study and standing database of patients hospitalized for transient ischemic attack (TIA) or stroke in the 11 accredited adult neurology training institutions in the Philippines. Data will be collected from each patient while admitted in the hospital and until hospital discharge. Data collection for this study will span 3 years from study initiation, after which the utility of an extension or a re-implementation of the study will be assessed.
The goal of this trial is to study, in three well-defined clinical situations responsible for cerebral hypoxia, the concentrations of biomarkers of thrombo-inflammation compared to a population of patients without cerebral hypoxia, and to study in patients with cerebral hypoxia the association between these concentrations and the clinical evolution.
The purpose of this prospective observational study is to create a database in which data will be collected from every patient admitted to the Stroke unit and who has explicitly given his or her informed consent for this data collection. The data that will be collected are part of the standard clinical data. No additional investigations, blood tests or any other tests will be performed. The purpose of this database is to conduct retrospective observational research in the future and will allow the hospital to keep track of some important quality indicators in stroke care.
The aim of this study is to determine the effects of an intervention using a commercially available probiotic in a cohort of acute stroke patients. In order to determine this, a double blinded, randomised and placebo-controlled study design was chosen.
Cerebral infarction by proximal occlusion of the anterior circulation is common with major personal and societal consequences. MRI is the gold standard for exploring stroke, especially ischemic, and a number of biomarkers on initial MRI (before reperfusion) are predictive of neurological prognosis. However, their spatiotemporal evolution in the suites of reperfusion is unclear. Close monitoring by MRI would make it possible to precisely know the tissue, vascular and microvascular evolution of the infarct area and the penumbra after reperfusion, and thus to characterize MRI biomarkers associated with efficient tissue reperfusion. The aim of the MR-Reperfusion study is to characterize new MRI biomarkers of efficient tissue reperfusion.
After acute ischemic stroke, the muscle strength of the limbs of the patients will decrease. Moreover, the respiratory muscles may also be affected. The respiratory muscle training may improve the respiratory recovery and prevent pulmonary complication.
The regional health authorities of South-East Norway has commissioned Sørlandet Hospital (SSHF), Norway to establish mechanical thrombectomy in large-vessel occlusion stroke. SSHF is a limited volume stroke center, and introduction of thrombectomy may impose quality challenges. Therefore the implementation will be guided by a simulation based quality assurance program. In this study, we will monitor timelines, technical and clinical outcomes, including adverse events.
Non-invasive brain stimulation (tDCS) such as transcranial direct current stimulation (TDCS) has been reported to be effective in improving motor performance and safe in participants with cerebral infarction. However, few studies have been done in participants with acute cerebral infarction. In this study, the investigators want to see the effect of tDCS in acute cerebral infarction. the investigators perform tDCS in participants with acute ischemic stroke within 48 hours after stroke onset and the investigators measure motor weakness and function at early phase as well as at 3 months.
BALT has designed an electronic platform to continue collecting clinical data as part of the post-marketing clinical follow-up of its devices. This platform is purely exploratory, without hierarchical order of the objectives and associated outcomes.