View clinical trials related to Stroke.
Filter by:Recent work on large cohorts of chronic stroke (>6 months post-stroke) have shown that intensive training of the upper limb in the chronic stroke patients can lead to substantial motor and functional gains that are maintained at 6 months post intervention. A very prolonged (12 weeks) and very intensive (5 hours daily) training applied to chronic patients after stroke brings a substantial gain both motor and functional which is maintained at 3 months post intervention. Robotic rehabilitation have been shown to be as effective as any other treatment used in rehabilitation. But the methods of implementation remain widely debated. At that time, most robotic therapies have tried to reproduce functional movement mainly pointing objects. We want to demonstrate that analytic movements of the elbow and the shoulder performed with the Luna-EMG robot can replace part of usual physiotherapy treatment with at least the same effectiveness on the recovery of fluid movements of the upper limb after a stroke.
Stroke is a strong risk factor for dementia, with up to 80% of individuals having lower cognitive function 5 years after a stroke event. However, having a stroke does not need to result in declining cognition if effective strategies to reduce the risk of post stroke dementia are identified. Diets containing nuts can reduce the risk of both dementia and stroke but have not been tested in stroke survivors. Therefore, this pilot study aims to determine whether eating nuts regularly reduces post-stroke cognitive decline and dementia. The NUT-me pilot study will supplement the diet of stroke survivors with a mix of nuts containing walnuts, hazelnuts, almonds and Brazil nuts for 3 months and assess the effects on cognition and health markers. The researchers predict that regular nut consumption will contribute to preserving post-stroke cognitive function in comparison to patients who do not consume nuts. The results of this novel pilot study will be used to guide a larger trial and provide a simple dietary strategy that stroke survivors can adopt to reduce post-stroke cognitive decline.
This project will investigate effects of a novel theory-driven 6-week virtual Personal Resource Building and Inclusive Volunteering Intervention (PVI) on young stroke survivors' work ability, self-efficacy and psychosocial outcomes. It is hypothesised that participants in the intervention group, compared with the control group, will demonstrate the outcomes below at immediately and 3 months post-intervention with respect to baseline: 1) Significant improvement in work ability (primary outcome), 2) Significant improvements in self-efficacy, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), emotional well-being and social skills (secondary outcomes). Eligible participants will be randomly assigned to receive usual care or PVI with usual care and the control group participants will receive usual stroke care services.
1. To evaluate whether stent implantation on the ipsilateral extracranial segment, after intracranial thrombectomy successful recanalization compared with balloon angioplasty (eTICI≥2b_50) for acute anterior circulation tandem lesions within 24h of onset, can improve neurological functional outcomes(mRS≤2). 2. To evaluate whether stent implantation on the ipsilateral extracranial segment, after intracranial thrombectomy successful recanalization compared with balloon angioplasty (eTICI≥2b_50) for acute anterior circulation tandem lesions within 24h of onset, can increase the risk of symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage.
Although stroke home care patients receive various treatments, they generally continue their lives as semi-dependent or fully dependent. Considering that stroke patients are especially elderly individuals, it is seen that they receive home health services and need a caregiver. The caregiver feels themselves under a heavy burden due to the lack of knowledge and insufficient experience. In addition, the lack of social support levels and the lack of training in patient care cause negative effects on patient outcomes.
The prevalence of obesity among U.S. adults is ~40% and is projected to climb. It is well documented that obesity is associated with increased levels of disability as well as risk for numerous adverse health-related outcomes; including occurrence of stroke and all-cause mortality. Obesity is highly prevalent in stroke survivors (~30-45% of stroke survivors have BMI>30) and is associated with reductions in physical function and increased disability. Furthermore, neurological sequelae following stroke result in a myriad of residual impairments that contribute to significant reductions in physical activity, which further increase the risk for obesity. The alarmingly high (and increasing) rates of obesity amongst stroke survivors represents an area of critical clinical need and, despite an abundance of information regarding weight loss approaches in neurologically healthy individuals, there is a lack of information regarding the impact of intentional weight loss on overweight and obese survivors of stroke. Thus, the purpose of this study it investigate the effect of varying weight loss approaches on physical function and psychosocial outcomes in chronic stroke survivors.
The objective is to explore the potential short and long-term impact of the Exopulse Mollii Suit on subjects with CP, MS, stroke, SCI or other neurological disorders which may cause such types of symptoms, and to identify high responders among the sub-categories of the diagnoses. The primary endpoint will be improvement on the Berg/Pediatric Balance Scale (BBS) as a measurement of balance and risk of falls.
This project evaluates the feasibility of using custom wearable technology and associated procedures to increase activity of the more-involved upper extremity during the earliest stages of recovery from stroke by increasing the amount of therapeutic exercise during idle-time. The proposed research is relevant to public health because it takes steps to mitigate a significant problem in physical rehabilitation using low-cost technology to motivate and monitor idle-time exercise without adding significantly to clinician workloads. The project aligns with the NICHD / NCMRR Research Plan on Rehabilitation by exploiting a mobile health (mHealth) and sensor-based approach to promote health and wellness through participant-engaged, data-driven, individualized care.
The proposed study is a multicenter, prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial involving patients with ischemic stroke who are candidates for receiving intravenous (IV) thrombolysis within 4.5 hours after stroke onset. The study aims to test the hypothesis that anterior circulation ischemic stroke patients, selected with "dual target" vessel occlusion within 4.5 hours of onset, will have improved reperfusion and early neurological improvement when treated with intra-arterial clot retrieval after IV reteplase, compared to IV alteplase. Patients will be randomized into one of three treatment arms: local institutional IV thrombolysis, IV reteplase (9 U bolus), or IV reteplase (9 U bolus + 9 U bolus). The study will assess the primary angiographic endpoint of partial or complete recanalization following administration of thrombolytics, as well as the time of recanalization and the time from symptom onset to recanalization. Additional outcome measures include early neurological improvement, assessed by a ≥4-point improvement in National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score in the first 24 hours compared to baseline. The trial will be conducted in three groups based on the site of baseline arterial occlusion: internal carotid artery (ICA), proximal middle cerebral artery (MCA - M1), or distal middle cerebral artery (MCA - M2). The study aims to evaluate third-generation thrombolytic - RETAVASE® (reteplase) and compare it to IV alteplase, in acute ischemic stroke patients.
The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the initial safety and performance of the RapidPulseTM Aspiration System in patients experiencing acute ischemic stroke within 24 hours since the onset of stroke symptoms, or last known normal. Subject will undergo mechanical thrombectomy (a procedure to remove a clot in the brain which is preventing blood flow), with the RapidPulseTM Aspiration System. Participating in the trial is for 5-7 days or hospital discharge (whichever is earlier).