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Cerebrovascular Disorders clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02628561 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Associate to Constraint Induced Movement Therapy Over Premotor Cortex in Severe Stroke

Start date: January 2016
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose is to compare the effects of tDCS and constraint induced movement therapy (CIMT) in the premotor cortex vs. primary motor cortex in severely subacute stroke survivors.

NCT ID: NCT02602951 Completed - Clinical trials for Cerebro-vascular Disease

4D FLOW: Feasibility Study of a Sequence 4D of Flow Applied to the Cervico-encephalic Vascular Pathologies

4D-FLOW
Start date: November 17, 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The dynamic angio-MR sequences with injection of contrast (CE ARM) allow the study of the vascular anatomy. These sequences, widely used in clinical routine have shown their utility, in particular in the detection of the cerebrovascular diseases. The 4D flow MR sequences allow to quantify arterial parameters such as the speed of the circulating flow. By allowing an anatomical analysis and a functional analysis of quantitative parameters, 4D flow MR sequences could replace 1/ the currently used dynamic MRA sequences that are less precise in term of spatial and temporal resolution; 2/ the invasive exploration by DSA for the detection of vascular lesion and complete the exploration of the cervico-encephalic vascular pathologies by providing hemodynamical measures not yet accessible in clinical settings. In this context, the aim of the study is to evaluate the feasibility and the clinical usefulness of this 4D Flow technique to image brain vascular disorders including steno occlusive disorders. The evaluation will include several steps: 1/ optimization of acquisition parameters for the cranio-cervical arteries; 2/ comparison of two strategies for the post-processing 3/ feasibility for imaging of brain vascular disorders.

NCT ID: NCT02594995 Completed - Clinical trials for Anterior Cerebral Circulation Infarction

The Impact of NBP on the Collateral Circulation in ICA/M1 Occlusion

INCIMO
Start date: July 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Stroke is the first leading cause of death in China, and is responsible for almost 22.4% of deaths. In approximately 80% of cases stroke is ischaemic, i.e. caused by disruption of blood flow to part of the brain from an acute arterial occlusion. Survival of penumbral tissue distal to an arterial occlusion depends on collateral circulation via the Circle of Willis and leptomeningeal anastomises. Collateral flow is dynamic and failure is associated with infarct growth. The presence of adequate collaterals has been shown to be associated with age, history of statin use, and non-hypertension. Dl-3-n-butylphthalide (NBP), isolated from the seeds of celery, and found to exert protective effects against ischemic brain and increase leptomeningeal blood flow. This study investigate whether NBP injection prescribed during acute stroke will have a significant effect to improve collateral circulation in patients of anterior circulation occlusion.

NCT ID: NCT02553655 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Remote Ischemic Limb Preconditioning In Healthy Volunteers

Start date: October 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators would like to determine if remote ischemic leg preconditioning in healthy volunteers improves cerebral vasomotor reactivity as measured by breath holding and transcranial doppler vasomotor reactivity.

NCT ID: NCT02444715 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Computer-Aided Prevention System

CAPSYS
Start date: January 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Stroke is one of the most frequent and life-threatening diseases in Europe. About four stroke events occur per day in Luxembourg alone, and about 30% of these patients are affected by recurrent stroke within the following five years. Thus, new methods of primary and secondary prevention are needed to better control lifestyle-related risk factors. The development and maintenance of a healthy lifestyle (smoking cessation, healthy nutrition, moderate physical exercises etc.) is a major objective concerning the primary and secondary prevention of cerebro- and cardiovascular diseases. CAPSYS is a computer-based lifestyle coaching system developed by researchers from the Public Research Centre (CRP) Henri Tudor in Luxembourg in collaboration with neurologists from the Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg (CHL), which aims at supporting patients in performing appropriate behavior changes in order to minimize their individual risk factors. Patients can access CAPSYS by dialing a local-rate telephone number and answer to a set of previously known questions concerning their current nutrition, physical activity, blood pressure, smoking etc. In an interactive voice response approach, questions are issued by the system in natural language using text-to-speech, and the patient can provide the required values using the phone keypad. Based on the gathered values for each patient, the system automatically generates personalized verbal feedback at runtime and presents it to the patient during the phone dialog. Depending on the individual development of the patient's risk factors, the system feedback can contain advice for improvement, praise for healthy behavior and motivation to pursue a certain goal. The user acceptance and effectiveness of the CAPSYS system is evaluated in a six-month randomized controlled study with participants recruited at CHL's neurology department.

NCT ID: NCT02354040 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Using a Tailored Health Information Technology Driven Intervention to Improve Health Literacy and Medication Adherence

TalkingRx
Start date: April 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Although most patients admitted with acute coronary syndrome or acute ischemic stroke in South Asian countries receive these evidence-based treatments, their overall continuation in the outpatient phase of care remains low. Patient from Pakistan are uniquely challenged in this respect because the overall literacy rates remain one of the lowest in Pakistan among South Asian Countries. In addition, a great majority of Pakistani patients often do not understand or follow health prescriptions (which are still written in English). Additionally, due to an unregulated health industry, they frequently take multiple opinions and prescriptions from different physicians. The investigators propose to develop a "talking prescription" for patients with stroke or myocardial infarction for secondary prevention. This will enable them to understand their medications better, improve health literacy and adherence. This is an IT enabled health literacy intervention. Physicians will prescribe statin and/or antiplatelet to the selected patients and enter the necessary details on an Optical Mark Recognition (OMR) sheet.Patients will be assigned to either of the 2 arms--either regular care or talking prescriptions. Follow-up will be done at 3 months post recruitment for behavioral knowledge assessment and adherence assessment.

NCT ID: NCT02351778 Completed - Clinical trials for Cerebrovascular Disease

Quality of Life of Stable Stroke Survivors in Pakistan

Start date: January 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

In study the investigators sought to 1. Assess the quality of life experience in stable post stroke survivors in Pakistan and detail important factors influencing quality of life. 2. Explore the association between primary care giver`s quality of life and stroke survivor's quality of life. 3. To validate the quality of life tools and experience via in depth interviews and focus group discussion with the primary care giver of stroke patients to report the quality of life of the primary care giver.

NCT ID: NCT02121028 Completed - Clinical trials for Intracranial Vascular Disorders

Mechanisms of Early Recurrence in Intracranial Atherosclerotic Disease

MyRIAD
Start date: May 1, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The objective of this study is to determine the mechanisms of stroke in patients with Intracranial Atherosclerotic Disease (IAD) by specifically evaluating limitations of antegrade flow through the stenotic artery, distal tissue perfusion to the affected territory, and artery-to-artery embolism. The hypothesis is that non-invasive imaging biomarkers that stratify stroke risk and distinguish mechanisms of IAD. This prospective multicenter study will enroll 175 patients with recently symptomatic high-grade IAD. Patients will be studied within 21 days of the index event (allowing appropriate time to arrange for diverse imaging modalities), with the following advanced neuroimaging techniques to elucidate mechanisms of recurrent ischemia: - Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (QMRA) to assess volumetric flow rate through the stenotic artery. - Magnetic resonance perfusion weighted imaging (PWI-MRI) to determine distal tissue perfusion. - Vasomotor reactivity by Transcranial Doppler using the breath-holding technique (BHI-TCD) to assess compensatory flow characteristics to the territory distal to the affected artery; - Transcranial Doppler with embolic signal monitoring to evaluate artery-to-artery embolism that reflects plaque instability. Patients will receive standardized medical management and its effectiveness on blood pressure, lipid, and glycemic control will be monitored. The primary outcome is recurrent stroke in the territory of the stenotic artery during a 1-year follow-up period; secondary outcomes are: a) new asymptomatic ischemic lesions on MRI in the distribution of the stenotic artery at 6-8 weeks, and b) transient ischemic attack (TIA) in the distribution of the stenotic artery during a 1-year follow-up period. Patients will be recruited at various sites that will be trained and certified on the imaging techniques employed. Raw imaging data will be interpreted centrally.

NCT ID: NCT01954212 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Stroke Oral healthCare pLan Evaluation

SOCLE II
Start date: October 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Stroke associated pneumonia (SAP) affects a fifth of stroke survivors annually, tripling the risk of death at 30 days and contributing to poorer rehabilitation outcomes, prolonged hospital stays and dependency at discharge. Systematic review evidence indicates that enhanced oral health care (OHC) has a preventative effect on the incidence of pneumonia amongst nursing home populations (absolute risk reductions 6.6% to 11.7%; numbers needed to treat 8.6 to 15.3 individuals). There are strong theoretical reasons to suggest similar benefits might be observed in stroke care settings but current empirical evidence is weak - trial quality (randomisation, blinding, sample size, reporting), intervention description and thus feasibility of translation into clinical practice is very poor. Following an extensive pre-clinical programme of work, investigators now plan the pilot phase (Phase II) of a stepped-wedge cluster RCT of a well-developed and defined complex OHC intervention versus usual OHC. Investigators aim to establish a robust web-based randomisation process, refine the proposed intervention (training, tools, equipment), recruitment, adherence, record linkage and sampling methodologies. Investigators also aim to establish the relationship between SAP and plaque and any diversity between sites.

NCT ID: NCT01926691 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

Predictors for Poststroke Outcomes: Tel Aviv Brain Acute Stroke Cohort Acute Stroke Cohort (TABASCO)

TABASCO
Start date: April 1, 2008
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Background: Recent studies have demonstrated that even mild stroke survivors experience residual damage, which persists and in fact increases in subsequent years. About 45% of stroke victims remain with different levels of disability. While studies on cognitive impairment and dementia after stroke are receiving increasing clinical attention, the underlying pathophysiology is poorly understood. Identifying the mechanisms involved and recognizing early biomarkers for individual vulnerability, require a multi-modal approach, as the mechanisms involved in cerebrovascular disease and individual trajectories of post-stroke recovery may impact upon each other on various levels. Aims and Hypothesis: To date there is no single measure that can be used to identify patients who are prone to develop cognitive impairment and other disabilities from those with better recovery prospects. We hypothesize that data based on biochemical, neuroimaging, genetic and psychological measures can, in aggregate, serve as better predictors for subsequent disability, cognitive and neurological deterioration, and suggest possible interventions. Design: The TABASCO (Tel-Aviv Brain Acute Stroke Cohort) study, a prospective cohort study aim to recruit about approximately 1125 consecutive first-ever mild-moderate stroke patients. It is designed to evaluate the association between predefined demographic, psychological, inflammatory, biochemical, neuro-imaging and genetic markers, measured during the acute phase, and long-term outcome: subsequent cognitive deterioration, vascular events (including recurrent strokes), falls, affective changes, functional everyday difficulties and mortality. Discussion: This study is an attempt to comprehensively investigate the long term outcome of mild-moderate strokes. Its prospective design will provide quantitative data on stroke recurrence, the incidence of other vascular events and the evaluation of cognitive, affective and functional decline. Identifying the factors associated with post stroke cognitive and functional decline could potentially yield more effective therapeutic approaches. The investigators believe that an extensive approach of analyzing the interaction between different risk factors would more accurately predict neurological and cognitive deterioration.