View clinical trials related to Cerebral Infarction.
Filter by:ACT-42 is a domain of the ACT-GLOBAL platform (NCT06352632). This trial is a Phase 2b, multicenter, prospective, randomized, open label, blinded-endpoint (PROBE) controlled single-dose adaptive trial. A total of up to 600 male and female participants aged ≥ 45 to ≤ 90 years harboring an acute ischemic stroke who are eligible for an intravenous thrombolytic with or without endovascular thrombectomy therapy will be enrolled within 3 hours of stroke onset/last known well.
The ARCHIMEDES study (Anti-inflammatory and anti-thRombotic therapy with colCHicine and low dose rIvaroxaban for Major adverse cardiovascular Events reDuction in ischEmic Stroke) will be a randomized, double-blind, 2x2 factorial clinical trial, which will include at least 3000 and up to a maximum of 4500 patients with ischemic stroke without indication of oral anticoagulation.
A large, worldwide study called PREVENT is looking at a complication that can happen during a stroke treatment called thrombectomy. This complication is a perforation of a blood vessel. The investigators aim to: 1. Find what factors make this perforation more likely. 2. Understand why the perforation happens by looking closely at images taken during the procedure. 3. Create a simple way to classify these perforations to help doctors decide how to treat them right away. 4. Improve the emergent treatment of vessel perforation to stop the bleeding rapidly. 5. Provide data to guide decision whether thrombectomy should be continued or aborted after the event of vessel perforation. 6. Develop a safer way to perform thrombectomy. Investigators will compare the results collected for patients where perforation happened with those where perforation did not happen.
Aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage is a complex pathology, the pathophysiology of which is still imperfectly understood. Its morbidity and mortality remain significant. In addition to the damage sustained by the brain in the immediate aftermath of aneurysmal rupture, which is inaccessible to life-saving treatment, a significant proportion of lesions occur at a distance from the initial event. Delayed cerebral ischaemia is one of the most morbid complications. It combines an inflammatory pattern with vascular dysfunction and neuronal excitotoxicity, leading to avoidable secondary neuronal loss. Vascular dysfunction is mediated by a loss of homeostasis between endothelial cells and figurative blood cells, including platelets. However, the interrelationship between these elements and the precise chronology of the dysfunction remain imperfectly described to date. It therefore seems appropriate to propose temporal monitoring of platelet activation kinetics over time, combined with concomitant collection of markers of endothelial damage, in order to clarify the vascular chronobiology of this pathology.
This study intends to construct the goal-oriented integrated intervention model for AIS in-hospital procedure through the spatiotemporal positioning and the P-D-C-A cycle for continuous improvement (FAST model). Then a multicenter, evaluator-blind, cluster-randomized controlled study aims to verify the validity and safety of this FAST model.
Early antiplatelet therapy is promising for further improvement of functional prognosis on the basis of intravenous thrombolytic therapy. The primary purpose of this multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-parallel controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the early dual antiplatelet therapy (within 6 hours of onset ) of ticagrelor with aspirin combined with intravenous thrombolysis in improving good functional outcome (mRS score 0-1) at 90 days inpatients with ischemic stroke.
The objective of this clinical trial is to determine whether rapid local ischemic postconditioning (RL-IPostC) is effective in preventing brain edema and safe in acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients treated with mechanical thrombectomy. In this trial, researchers will block antegrade cerebral blood flow temporarily by the way of balloon inflation/deflation in AIS patients immediately after revascularization. It makes the ischemic reperfusion brain tissue have a capacity of adaptation through intermittent blood flow restoration. Researchers will evaluate the protective role and safety of different duration of balloon inflation/deflation. The optimal postconditioning intervention dose will be determined for further confirmative investigation.
The DOWN-SUITE study is multicenter, randomised, controlled, open-label clinical trial with blinded outcome assessment comparing collateral status in patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with an in-hospital application of head down tilt -10° to -15° (HDT15) versus usual positioning (0° to +30°) before endovascular mechanical thrombectomy. This study will involve adult patients who are eligible for mechanical thrombectomy and who have acute ischemic stroke due to left or right middle cerebral artery occlusion (M1 segment). The investigators hypothesise that HDT15, applied in acute ischemic stroke patients with a large vessel occlusion, will improve collateral circulation, prolong the survival of the ischemic penumbra and improve the clinical benefit from mechanical thrombectomy compared with standard of care (usual positioning 0° to +30°).
The clinical trial is for acute ischemic stroke patients measuring cerebral oxygen saturation (rSO2) values using pulse oximeter of near-infrared spectroscopy in the frontal lesion area and normal area of brain. The purpose of the clinical trial is to compare differences in cerebral oxygen saturation values, and the efficacy and safety are evaluated through additional exploratory clinical trials.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of ascending doses (Part A) and selected doses (Part B) of BB-031 in acute ischemic stroke patients presenting within 24 hours of stroke onset. Participants will be randomized to receive one dose of either the investigational drug or placebo and will be followed for 90 days. A total of 156 patients are planned in this study.