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Stroke clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02606006 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Inpatient Physical Activity Function Through Enhanced Participation Levels in Animal-Assisted Therapy Programs

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

Thousands of canines are used for therapy in health care centers throughout the United States as part of a volunteer therapy team, yet little is known about the outcomes provided by these teams. Although many studies have been published, few used randomized, controlled formats to identify whether canine therapy has an impact and any mechanisms by which any impact may occur. The purpose of this study is use a randomized, controlled setup for canine animal-assisted therapy (AAT) in patients undergoing inpatient physical therapy for stroke, Parkinson's disease, or generalized weakness deconditioning to determine whether use of AAT produces desirable outcomes, such as increased motivation, in patients.

NCT ID: NCT02559596 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Reactivation of Varicella Zoster Virus and Risk of Vascular Disease

Start date: June 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to investigate whether there is an association between stroke or heart attack and reactivation of varicella zoster virus, measured by antibody levels, using linked data from the Health Survey for England and secondary care.

NCT ID: NCT02426424 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Effect Of Early C-PAP Treatment For Sleep Apnea On Rehabilitation Of Stroke Patients

Start date: January 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a prospective randomized open label trial with control-to-treatment cross-over. The investigators wish to assess the effectiveness and safety of immediate detection and treatment for Sleep Apnea in Stroke patients. The investigators hypothesize that in patients with acute ischemic stroke a sleep apnea treatment by CPAP will result in a better neurological outcome and more successful rehabilitation. The study will enroll 140 subjects which will be randomized into one of two arms: - Investigational - The sleep study will be performed during the index hospitalization with acute stroke. Following the diagnosis of sleep apnea, patients will be treated with C-PAP both during the hospital stay and after discharge. - Control group -Will receive standard medical care. Patients will undergo sleep study at 3 months following discharge and patients diagnosed with sleep apnea will be treated with C-PAP.

NCT ID: NCT02383121 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Midodrine for Ischemic Stroke With Penumbra

MISP
Start date: May 10, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Acute ischemic stroke (AIS) affects over 700,000 Americans every year and is the leading cause of long-term disability. Early neurological deterioration after AIS typically occurs within 72 hours of stroke onset and affects 30% of all stroke patients, who have a higher rate of death or poor outcome. Several mechanisms account for early neurological deterioration, including hemorrhagic conversion, systemic illness, cerebral edema, and seizure, but the most common cause is extension of the stroke into the "penumbra," a region of salvageable brain tissue surrounding the core of irreversible ischemic infarct. The penumbra is tenuously perfused by collateral blood vessels. AIS management is primarily focused on recanalizing the occluded artery causing the stroke, but an alternative and relatively unexplored approach is optimization of collateral blood flow. Over 60% of AIS patients present with a transient acute hypertensive response, which is theorized to be the result of either increased sympathoadrenal tone, poorly controlled underlying hypertension, or an unknown stroke-specific mechanism related to augmenting cerebral perfusion through collateral blood flow. Epidemiological data suggests worse stroke outcomes are associated with extremes of sustained hypo- or hypertension, which has led to dozens of clinical trials involving over 20,000 patients to determine if pharmacologically lowering blood pressure after AIS is beneficial. The results have been persistently neutral or negative. In contrast, there have been no major clinical trials on the efficacy of using vasopressor medications to maintain or increase baseline blood pressure after AIS, despite promising preclinical data and pilot studies that showed no increase in cerebral hemorrhage or edema. The only randomized trial of vasopressor use after AIS demonstrated an improvement in clinical outcomes, but there was no difference in mean blood pressure between the control and intervention arms, suggesting the beneficial effect was not exclusively related to induced hypertension. One possibility is that the vasopressor reduced blood pressure variability, which preliminary data has shown to be detrimental after AIS, although that aspect of neurovascular coupling has not been adequately studied in the acute phase after AIS. The reliance on IV vasopressors, which are only administered in the intensive care unit, is a fundamental limitation of prior research. An alternative, but untested, approach is to use the oral vasopressor midodrine hydrochloride. We hypothesize that frequent midodrine dosing after AIS can optimize collateral blood flow and help salvage the ischemic penumbra. The objective of this study is to develop tools to quantify midodrine's effect on blood pressure and the ischemic penumbra.

NCT ID: NCT02358252 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Cerebrovascular Accident

Heart Rate Variability and Orthostatic Hypotension in Stroke Patients Evaluated by Intelligent Biosensor System

Start date: January 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This research investigated the heart rate variability (HRV) and stroke patients' orthostatic hypotension in hospitalized stroke patients accompanied with dizziness at varied tilting angle controlled by tilting table with intelligent biosensor.

NCT ID: NCT02346630 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Combining Robotic-Assisted Therapy and Pharmacotherapy in Post-Stroke Rehabilitation

Start date: March 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Stroke is the leading cause of acquired long-term disability in adults in developed countries. Despite aggressive rehabilitation, lasting upper extremity impairment remains in the majority of stroke survivors. It is hypothesized that enhancing neuroplasticity through the combination of drug therapy and physical therapy could enhance outcomes for stroke survivors. The combination of levodopa and intensive physical therapy shows promise in enhancing the functional motor recovery of stroke patients during the sub-acute and chronic period without reported significant side effects. Robotic-aided training is a promising tool that has the potential to deliver high-intensity, task-oriented, reproducible therapy that can decrease the burden on a therapist. Since the evidence behind dopaminergic potentiation of neuroplasticity and stroke recovery is promising, it is the investigators aim to combine dopaminergic drug therapy with highly intensive robotic-assisted therapy to provide superior upper extremity functional recovery over traditional stroke rehabilitation.

NCT ID: NCT02258880 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Efficacy, Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics of SUN13837 to Treat Acute Stroke

Start date: September 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of SUN13837 and to determine whether SUN13837 improves the physical performance, relative to placebo, following an acute stroke in adult subjects.

NCT ID: NCT02245698 Withdrawn - Stroke Clinical Trials

Autologous Stem Cell Therapy in Stroke

Start date: December 2008
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to study the safety and effect of stem cell therapy on the functional recovery in patients with sub acute/chronic stroke.

NCT ID: NCT02180204 Withdrawn - Ischemic Stroke Clinical Trials

Tenecteplase Versus Alteplase in Ischemic Stroke Management (TALISMAN)

TALISMAN
Start date: January 2015
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This is a double-blind parallel arm randomized trial aimed to assess efficacy and safety of intravenous Tenecteplase compared to intravenous Alteplase in eligible patients who present with symptoms of acute ischemic stroke within 3 to 4.5 hours from onset.

NCT ID: NCT02165644 Withdrawn - Vasospasm Clinical Trials

Carbonic Anhydrase Antagonism in Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Start date: September 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH) can occur commonly in the setting of trauma or brain aneurysm. SAH accounts for 10% of all the strokes. Aneurysmal SAH accounts for 80 % of cases of non-traumatic cases of SAH, 6-8% of all strokes and 22-25% of all cerebrovascular deaths. Mortality can be 50% in the first few years of aneurysmal SAH rupture, 15% are severely disabled post SAH and only 20-35% having a moderate to good recovery it has gained lot of attention and pre-clinical and clinical trials of various agents have been tried to prevent poor outcome. The United States epidemiology data reveals the fact that 1% to 5% of adults have unruptured brain aneurysm and 30,000 people suffer from aneurysm rupture annually translating to brain aneurysm rupture every 18 minutes. Vasospasm is the most common SAH complication post 24 hours. It is the segmental or diffuse narrowing of the vessels especially the large vessels. Fifty percent of those patients who develop clinical vasospasm, progress to infarction and 15-20% will advance to disabling stroke or die of cerebral ischemia. The present treatment modalities are insufficient to prevent vasospasm. So, we need new treatment modalities to decrease the mortality and morbidity in SAH patients. The investigators hypothesize that Acetazolamide administration can prevent development of vasospasm after aneurysmal SAH.