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Neurological Morbidity clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05097066 Completed - Surgery Clinical Trials

Patterns and Outcomes of Neurosurgery in England Over a Five-year Period

Start date: April 1, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Neurosurgical practice has seen many important changes over several decades with advances in treatments and the types of patients treated. Neurosurgical procedures have evolved, and as outcomes have improved the number of patients being treated has increased. There are no recent evaluations of national neurosurgical practice in the United Kingdom (UK), with the last prospective cohort studies being Safe Neurosurgery 1993 and Safe Neurosurgery 2000. More recent studies of neurosurgical services have been based on data from single institutions or surgeons and these may not give a representative picture of practice nationally. Recent national quality improvement programmes for neurosurgery in England (such as the National Neurosurgical Audit Programme (NNAP) and Cranial Neurosurgery and Spinal Surgery Getting It Right First Time (GIRFT) Programmes) have focused on using national hospital administrative datasets. To be effective, quality improvement initiatives require robust outcome measures and quality (process) indicators. Currently, there is a lack of validated quality indicators for neurosurgery, with practice often being described using generic measures such as readmission and reoperation rates and length of stay. Many studies have been able to derive these common outcome measures, but it may also be possible to produce indicators specific to neurosurgery. The aim of this observational study was firstly to describe the current pattern of neurosurgical admissions and procedures in England, and thereby given an overview of the epidemiology of neurosurgical patients. Secondly, it aims to investigate the range of outcome measures that might be produced from hospital administrative data and use these to assess the quality of care in neurosurgery.

NCT ID: NCT04956835 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Anesthesia Morbidity

The Implementation of the Classification of Intraoperative Adverse Events (ClassIntra) for Neurosurgical Procedures

Start date: July 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In the planned study, the ClassIntra score will be assessed after all neurosurgical procedures in the upcoming 6 months and correlated with all pre- and postoperative data. Afterwards, the conclusion will be made, if the ClassIntra score could predict the postoperative course of the patients regarding their neurological and general condition. Furthermore, analyses will be made to develop novel postoperative routines adjusted to the individual ClassIntra score of the patient.

NCT ID: NCT04800809 Completed - Stroke Clinical Trials

The Afolabi Stroke Registry for Children and Young Adults With SCD in Northern Nigeria

Start date: April 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Sickle Cell Anemia (SCA) occurs in 300,000 newborns per year in the world, with 150,000 affected births in Nigeria, alone. With improvement in survival for children with SCA in both high- and low-resource countries, neurological morbidity is an emerging significant public health challenge, particularly in countries with a high rate of sickle cell disease (SCD). Both silent cerebral infarcts (SCI) and overt strokes result in significant neurological morbidity and premature death. Five NIH-funded randomized controlled trials (RCT) demonstrated that regular blood transfusion or hydroxyurea therapy are efficacious treatments for primary and secondary stroke prevention in children with SCA. Despite the observation that at least 99% of children with SCA in high-resource settings reach adulthood, and approximately 60% of adults will experience one or more strokes (~50% with SCI and ~10% with overt strokes) and the high disease-burden in Nigeria, the prevalence and incidence rates of new and recurrent stroke (overt and silent strokes)have not been collected systematically in children and young adults (16-25 years old) with SCA. In the last decade, there has been growing use of stroke registries in economically advanced nations, particularly for epidemiological purposes of trend analysis, clinical effectiveness, compliance to guidelines, assessment of implementation, adoption of novel techniques, and quality improvement process. For the first time in clinical centers in Nigeria, the Investigators will conduct an observational epidemiological study to document the prevalence and track the incidence of new and recurrent strokes in children and young adults with SCD. The Investigators will create a stroke registry referred to as the Afolabi Stroke Registry for Children and Young Adults with Sickle Cell Disease in Nigeria. The overall purpose of the stroke registry is to document the natural history of SCD in a low-resource setting and to improve the quality of the care of children and young adults with SCD living in Nigeria.

NCT ID: NCT04755439 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Neurological Complication

Without Cerebral perfusıon Under Deep Hypothermic Circulatory Arrest (DHCA) (18 Deegres) the Comparison of the Undergoing Proximal Aortic Surgery Patients Preoperative and Postoperative Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging's and Neuron Specific Enolase Enzyms Levels.

NON
Start date: December 10, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Deep hypothermic circulatory arrest (DHCA) (18 degree) without cerebral perfusion is a safe technique. Resarchers use this technique in patients with proximal aortic pathologies. During the DHCA period, cerebral silent ischemic events may occur. But the silent ischemic events don't neurological problems with patients.