View clinical trials related to Cervical Artery Dissection.
Filter by:Cervical artery dissection (CAD) accounts for about 2% of all strokes, and is a major cause of stroke in young people (about 15%). Many cases of CAD during pregnancy and puerperium have been described, suggesting that pregnancy and puerperium may be potential risk factors for CAD. The purpose of this study is to determine whether pregnancy and puerperium are also recurrence risk factors for CAD.
Primary objective: To demonstrate the non-inferiority of acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) to anticoagulant treatment (vitamin K antagonists) in CAD-patients with regard to outcome and complication measures. Methods: Randomized controlled, open labeled multicenter, non-inferiority trial with blinded assessment of outcome events. Primary endpoint: Primary composite outcome measure - labeled Cerebrovascular Ischemia, major Hemorrhagic events or Death (CIHD) - includes the following efficacy and safety outcome measures during the treatment period: (i) occurrence of any stroke*, new acute lesions on diffusion weighted MRI (ii) any major extracranial hemorrhage, any symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage and any asymptomatic micro- or macrobleeds, (iii) death.
This is a feasibility study to determine if a sufficient number of patients can be recruited throughout the United Kingdom and whether sufficient endpoints can be generated for a full scale therapeutic trial of anticoagulants versus antiplatelets in acute cervical artery dissection treatment.