Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of the study is to determine the sensitivity, specificity and predictive values of the Jan Medical NeuroWave System in detecting moderate and severe vasospasm in comparison to Trans Cranial Doppler(TCD).


Clinical Trial Description

Cerebral vasospasm generally occurs due to a ruptured brain aneurysm, or (very rarely) hemorrhage from another blood vessel abnormality such as an arteriovenous malformation (AVM). The common factor is the abnormal presence of a substantial amount of blood on the outer ("subarachnoid" or "adventitial") surface of the blood vessel. This can particularly affect arteries at the base of the brain, i.e., around the Circle of Willis. Depending on the severity, this can be seen using conventional angiography. Angiographic spasm tends to be most readily detected at about 5-7 days after the SAH, although it may be detected as early as 3 days after the hemorrhage. It occurs in between half to two-thirds of all aneurysm patients depending on the time at which angiography was carried out. Clinical vasospasm occurs in approximately one-third of all patients suffering aneurysmal SAH. The essential problem with vasospasm is that it causes an artery to reduce blood flow or completely shut down. As a result, the part of the brain formerly supplied by that artery effectively starves (ischemia) and may die (infarction or stroke). Overall, cerebral vasospasm accounts for approximately 20% of the severe disability and death associated with ruptured aneurysms. If vasospasm is detected early, a patient can be treated with balloon angioplasty to reopen the vessels or have infusions of a vasodilator administered (typically verapamil or nicardipine). Alternatively, or in concert with that treatment, one can administer intravenous drugs that raise the patient's blood pressure ("pressors") to force more blood through the narrow arteries. Both of these treatments carry risk and therefore should not be administered unless vasospasm is detected. Therefore, in order to prevent this form of brain injury and enhance the likelihood that a patient will do better, one needs to detect vasospasm before it becomes severe enough to injure the brain. Vasospasm can be detected by the signs observed on physical examination of the patient and by radiological methods such as cerebral angiography, and Trans-Cranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasound. The physical exam is sensitive for vasospasm in patients who are otherwise awake and able to participate in a neurological examination. Many patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage are not keenly aware nor participative to make this clinical exam meaningful. Therefore clinical examination alone lacks sensitivity. The gold standard method for detecting vasospasm is cerebral angiography. This involves injection of a radiopaque dye into the arterial blood stream of a patient and when the dye reaches the brain X-rays are taken. Although this is the gold-standard for diagnosing vasospasm it carries the risk of arterial injury or even stroke, and the expense is high. In addition the contrast dye used in these studies carries the risk of renal failure. As a result, this technology is generally employed once vasosapasm is suspected from a Trans Cranial Doppler (TCD) study. TCD is a bedside test that relies on ultrasound waves generated from a probe placed on the skin of the head and/or neck region to detect the flow of blood in a cerebral artery. It is a convenient, safe, and frequently effective method that can be used to rapidly confirm the clinical findings, and is much less invasive than cerebral angiography. It has, however, numerous technical limitations; for example, one can only detect vasospasm in the proximal vessels of the circle of Willis and therefore lacks sensitivity. It is also quite operator dependent and limited to patients with appropriate skull thickness and acoustic windows. What is needed is a non-invasive, user independent, safe method to detect cerebral vasospasm before it causes brain injury. The technology needs to be simple to use and can be done at the bedside in an ICU environment. Such a tool will likely improve patient outcome by initiating a chain of events that can mitigate vasospasm (cerebral angioplasty or initiation of vasopressor therapy) and will likely shorten the length of stay within the Neuro ICU saving hospitals money. The Jan Medical NeuroWave is a simple, rapid, non invasive aid to the diagnosis of vasospasm that is not operator dependent nor limited by skull structure. This study will determine the sensitivity, specificity and predictive values of the Jan Medical NeuroWave System in detecting moderate and severe vasospasm in comparison to Trans Cranial Doppler (TCD). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01595802
Study type Observational
Source Jan Medical, Inc.
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date January 2012
Completion date July 2015

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02275949 - Acupuncture for Cerebral Vasospasm After Subarachnoid Hemorrhage N/A
Completed NCT02389634 - Identification of Novel Molecular Markers for Vasospasm
Completed NCT00962546 - Computed Tomographic (CT) Perfusion and CT Angiography as Screening Tools for Vasospasm Following Subarachnoid Hemorrhage N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04512859 - Stellate Ganglion Block in Preventing Cerebral Vasospasm Secondary to Subarachnoid Hemorrhage N/A
Completed NCT01024972 - Safety Study of Dantrolene in Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00692744 - Quality of Life in Elderly After Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH) N/A
Completed NCT04208477 - "The Effect of Stellate Ganglion Block in Severe Brain Injury" N/A
Recruiting NCT06303349 - Predictive Model for the Occurrence of Cerebral Vasospasm Complicating Subarachnoid Haemorrhage by Combined Analysis of the Kinetics of a Panel of Biomarkers. N/A
Recruiting NCT02129413 - Safety Study of Carotid Body Neurostimulation to Treat Cerebral Vasospasm N/A
Terminated NCT00582868 - Use of Brain Oxygen Tension Level and Cleaved-tau Protein to Detect Vasospasm After SAH N/A
Terminated NCT00487461 - Use of Simvastatin for the Prevention of Vasospasm in Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage N/A
Withdrawn NCT01878136 - Effect of Intraventricular tPA Following Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Phase 1/Phase 2
Withdrawn NCT01091870 - Sildenafil for Prevention of Cerebral Vasospasm Phase 2
Completed NCT03214705 - Role of CT Perfusion in Predicting Poor Outcome After Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
Recruiting NCT05150002 - Cervical Spinal Cord Stimulation in Patients With Cerebral Vasospasm After Subarachnoid Haemorrhage: VasoStim Study N/A
Completed NCT01187420 - Bilateral Bispectral Index (BIS) Study N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05230134 - Cervical Sympathetic Block in Patients With Cerebral Vasospasm N/A
Withdrawn NCT02426827 - Cervical Spinal Cord Stimulation in Cerebral Vasospasm N/A
Withdrawn NCT00871065 - Safety Study of Sildenafil in Treatment of Cerebral Aneurysm Vasospasm Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04691271 - Stellate Ganglion Block and Cerebral Vasospasm N/A