Middle Cerebral Artery Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Stereotactic Infarct Tissue Aspiration (SITA) for Malignant Infarction of Middle Cerebral Artery
Malignant middle cerebral artery infarction(MMCI) has a high rate of disability and mortality. At present, there is no effective treatment except for craniotomy decompression, but the controversy of the craniotomy decompression still exists. The project is a prospective, randomized, single center, open label, clinical controlled trail. The eligible patients for enrollment are as follows: (1) malignant cerebral artery infarction within 48h onset; (2) craniotomy decompression can not be performed due to the contraindications, or refused by the patient or relatives. The patients are randomly assigned into 2 groups: (1)Medical therapy group: receiving osmotic therapy with mannitol and glycerol fructose,anti-platelet treatment, statins, and other symptomatic treatments such as controlling blood pressure, blood sugar, and infection, tracheal intubation or incision, etc; (2) Stereotactic infarct tissue aspiration (SITA) group: on the basis of medical treatment, receiving minimally invasive aspiration of infarct tissue 24-48 hours after stroke attacked. This study is aimed at comparing the efficacy and safety of of SITA in patients with MMCI.
Malignant middle cerebral artery infarction (MMCI) has a fatality rate of up to 80%, due to
massive brain edema, increased intracranial pressure, and cerebral herniation. The
herniation-induced death usually occured during the first week, despite aggressive
osmotherapy with mannitol or hypertonic saline, sedation, and eventually hyperventilation,
buffers, or hypothermia. A growing evidence show that decompression craniectomy (DC) can
produce a significant reduction in mortality rate and an improvement in neurological outcome,
but the controversy of the DC still exists. There is an urgent need to find a more effective
treatment method. Given that brain tissue necrosis-induced edema and cerebral herniation is
the key reason of fatality and disability of MMCI patients, the investigators argue that the
reduction of cerebral tissue volume by stereotactic infarct tissue aspiration (SITA) is
likely to reach the decompression effect similar to the DC. Recently, the investigators
performed SITA in 2 MMCI patients who were qualified for decompressive craniectomy, but
refused by patient relatives, and their neurological function significantly improved.
The project is a prospective, randomized, single center, open label, clinical controlled
trail. The eligible patients for enrollment are as follows: (1)ages from 40 to 90 years old;
(2) malignant cerebral artery infarction within 48h onset; (3) craniotomy decompression can
not be performed due to the contraindications, or refused by the patient or relatives. The
patients are randomly assigned into 2 groups: (1) Medical therapy group: receiving osmotic
therapy with mannitol and glycerol fructose,anti-platelet treatment, statins, and other
symptomatic treatments such as controlling blood pressure, blood sugar, and infection, and
tracheal intubation or incision, etc; (2) SITA group: receiving minimally invasive aspiration
of infarct tissue 24-48 hours after stroke attacked on the basis of medical treatment. This
study is aimed at comparing the efficacy and safety of of SITA in patients with MMCI.
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