View clinical trials related to Intracranial Aneurysm.
Filter by:Hypothesis: Correction of preoperative anemia can reduce the need for intra-/postoperative RBC transfusions and can improve surgical outcomes.
Patients admitted to Haukeland University Hospital with either UIA or aSAH underwent a measurement of bioelectrical impedance and body mass composition using InBody 10. Lipids and lipoproteins were collected from plasma. 60 patients in total were included in the study.
The objective of the proposed investigation is to assess the safety and effectiveness of the Merlin's DiVeRt system for the treatment of intracranial lesions. Merlin is a manufacturer of Flow- Diverters (FD) for Neurovascular applications. The technology is based on a microporous polymer membrane which is delivered to the site of lesion treatment using a metal stent scaffold. The first device in its FD family is the XCalibur Aneurysm Occlusion Device (AOD) system, which is delivered on a rapid-exchange balloon catheter which goes in a 6-Fr guide-catheter. The AOD is CE-marked and has been involved in the treatment of over 70 clinical lesion/aneurysm cases. The same technology is now being made available in a self-expandable stent platform delivered on a 0.028" microcatheter. Merlin has performed the required in-silico, in-vitro and in-vivo tests to be confident of the device performance and now intends to proceed to the human clinical-trials. DiVeRt (Interventional) is a non CE mark device. The device is under clinical trial phase. The competent authority submission for the study has been completed in Spain, Turkey and Hungary.
This study aims to determine the inter- and intra-variability of Transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasound in neuro-critical care patients who are planned for consecutive daily TCD evaluations.
Cerus Endovascular is sponsoring a prospective, multi-center PMCF to document the safety and performance of the Contour Neurovascular System™ (hereinafter "Contour") in normal medical use.
The protocol has many assets. A prospective nationwide recruitment allows for the inclusion of a large cohort of patients with UIA. It will combine accurate clinical phenotyping and comprehensive imaging with CAWE screening. Besides, it will enable to exploit metadata and to explore new pathophysiological pathways of interest by crossing clinical, genetic, biological, and imaging information.
IMPACT is an observational, post market study designed to provide an ongoing safety and performance evaluation of Stryker Neurovascular devices used for the treatment of intracranial aneurysms with an endovascular approach.
This device was designed to assist in the stent-assisted coil embolization of intracranial aneurysms, specifically those that have a wide neck that would not otherwise maintain the coil embolization material within the aneurysm because of the wide opening at the base of the aneurysm. This device was designed to treat aneurysms that are: unruptured, wide-necked, intracranial, saccular aneurysms arising from a parent vessel ≥ 2 mm and ≤ 4.5 mm. Wide-necked was defined as having a neck > 4mm or dome-to-neck ratio < 2.
The main objective of this single arm study is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of the AXS Infinity LS (Stryker, Freemont, CA, USA) and AXS Infinity LS Plus (Stryker, Freemont, CA, USA) catheters during the transradial approach through a secondary use of the data collected during neurointerventional procedures. This includes evaluating the conversion rates to a transfemoral approach. A secondary aim of the study is to assess the radial artery occlusion rates post procedure.
Despite the active development of surgical methods of treatment (endovascular embolization and microsurgical clipping) of cerebral aneurysms, determining the indications and method of surgical treatment of cerebral aneurysms still causes debate in many cases. To a greater extent, this concerns the treatment of unruptured aneurysms. While there are a number of randomized trials of surgical treatment of ruptured cerebral aneurysms, there is currently no published randomized trial comparing surgical clipping and endovascular embolization of unruptured aneurysms. The purpose of this study is to compare the safety and efficacy of microsurgical clipping and endovascular embolization of cerebral aneurysms (both ruptured and unruptured) in a prospective, randomized fashion.