Becoming Children With Perinatal Anoxo-Ischemic Encephalopathy Without Indication of Therapeutic...
Anoxic-Ischemic EncephalopathyThere are 3 levels of severity of anoxo-ischemic encephalopathy (EAI): mild, moderate and severe. Therapeutic hypothermia is beneficial in children with moderate EAI. It is ineffective in severe EAI and may be deleterious if there is no EAI. He continues to question his interest in light EAIs. There are few studies on the becoming of children with a mild anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy and not set hypothermia. The main hypothesis of the study is that term newborns with anoxo-ischemic encephalopathy who did not require therapeutic hypothermia have normal psychomotor development at 2 years.
Brain and Cognitive Reserve
Brain IschemiaIschemic strokes are one of the leading causes of handicap and death in elderly people in France. Cognitive reserve (CR) is an active model, defined as a function of lifetime intellectual activities and other environmental factors that explain differential susceptibility to functional impairment in the presence of pathology or other neurological insult. CR is estimated using variables for cognitive activity: years of education, professional status, socioeconomic status… Furthermore, brain reverse (BR) is a passive and quantitative model that depend on brain size and other quantitative aspects of the brain that explain differential susceptibility to functional impairment in the presence of pathology. Firstly, volume and localization of ischemic strokes have a great impact on CR and BR due to brain injury. On the other hand, CR influences the severity and the expression of cognitive diseases. The investigators realize a prospective study in order to assess the impact of CR and BR on cognitive prognosis after a right middle cerebral artery ischemic stroke in elderly patients.
The Neuroprotection of Sevoflurane Preconditioning on Intracranial Aneurysm Surgery
Brain IschemiaThe current study is designed to clarify the neuroprotective effect of sevoflurane preconditioning on the patients underwent intracranial aneurysm surgery.
The TOBY Children Study
Cerebral PalsyHypoxia-Ischemia1 moreThe aim of this study is to determine the efficacy of therapeutic hypothermia following perinatal asphyxia on neurological and neuropsychological outcomes and also to assess academic attainment and any additional health, societal or educational costs associated with changes in outcome as a result of the intervention. This study will determine whether the apparent initial benefits of cooling are maintained in the longer term. Perinatal asphyxia (a lack of oxygen occurring around the time of birth) may have long term consequences on brain functioning, which may be altered by treatment with hypothermia (cooling). Currently, there is no information on the effect of cooling on outcome beyond 18 months of age. We intend to assess at 6 - 7 years of age, the children that participated in the TOBY trial of whole body cooling following perinatal asphyxia and compare between the children that had received the cooling treatment soon after birth and those that were not treated with cooling, the number that survived with an intelligence quotient (IQ) greater than 84, the presence and severity of disabilities, educational attainment and the economic impact on families and service providers. If possible, children will be assessed in their school, with the option of alternative venues such as home or clinic if required. During the assessment a paediatrician will conduct a neurological examination. A psychologist will administer psychometric tests to evaluate cognitive, behavioural and motor development. Questionnaires completed by parents and teachers will complete the data collection. Economic factors will also be assessed in the parent questionnaire. Each child will have contact with the assessors during one school day with appropriate breaks. Assessments will take place over a period of 3 years.
Bedside Optical Retinal Assessment of Hypoxic Ischemic Encephalopathy in Infants
Hypoxic-Ischemic EncephalopathyThe purpose of this study is to develop a novel noninvasive bedside optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging technique in newborn infants with HIE that improves our ability to assess the range of retinal effects from HIE and to diagnose and monitor treatments of HIE.
Neuropsychological Outcome After Cardiac Arrest
Heart ArrestOut-Of-Hospital6 moreThis study is a sub-study to the large pragmatic Target Temperature Management 2 Trial (TTM2-trial, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02908308), assessing effectiveness of controlled hypothermia after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA). This study is designed to provide detailed information on cognition after OHCA and its relationship to associated factors as emotional function, fatigue, and sleep. A secondary aim is to utilize this information to validate a neurocognitive screening battery used 6 months after OHCA in the TTM2-trial. Approximately 7 and 24 months after OHCA, survivors at selected TTM2 study sites will perform a standardized neuropsychological assessment including performance-based tests of cognition and questionnaires of behavioral and emotional function, fatigue, and insomnia. At 1:1 ratio, a control group of myocardial infarction (MI) patients but no occurrence of cardiac arrest will be recruited and perform the same test battery. Group differences at 7 and 24 months will be analyzed per cognitive domain (verbal, visual/constructive, short-term working memory, episodic memory, processing speed, executive functions). Results of the OHCA survivors on the TTM2 neurocognitive screening battery will be compared with neuropsychological test results at 7 months time.
Detection of Cerebral Ischemia With a Noninvasive Neurometabolic Optical Monitor
Traumatic Brain InjuryIschemic Stroke3 moreThe goals of the project are to evaluate a noninvasive monitor of brain metabolism and blood flow in critically ill humans. If validated, such a reliable noninvasive brain blood flow and metabolism monitor, by allowing physiologic and pharmacologic decisions based on real-time brain physiology, potentially will become an important tool for clinicians in their efforts to prevent additional brain tissue death in patients admitted with stroke, brain hemorrhage and traumatic brain injury.
Role of Umbilical Cord Milking in the Management of Hypoxic-ischemic Encephalopathy in Neonates...
Hypoxic-Ischemic EncephalopathyThe purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of umbilical cord milking in depressed neonates at birth for prevention of hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy.
Correlation Between Laboratory Markers and Origin of New Brain Ischemic Lesions After Carotid Stenting...
Carotid StenosisBrain Ischemia1 moreNew brain ischemic lesions are detected in about 50% of patients undergoing carotid artery stenting (CAS). The aim was to assess correlation between selected laboratory markers and occurrence of new brain infarctions after CAS.
Pre-stroke Cognitive Status and Thrombolytic Therapy
Brain IschemiaAdverse Effect of Thrombolytic Drugs2 moreAt the acute stage of cerebral ischaemia, the only effective drug that increases the proportion of patients who survive without dependency is thrombolytic therapy by intravenous (i.v.) tissue-plasminogen activator (t-PA). This treatment is entered into routine practice with similar results than in trials, in various places of the world including Europe and Japan. Stroke and dementia are closely related. About one patient in ten has dementia before a first-ever stroke, and more than one in three has dementia after a recurrent stroke. Pre-existing dementia is associated with a worse outcome of stroke, and pre-existing cognitive impairment without dementia is associated with a higher rate of institutionalisation within 3 years. In many patients cognitive impairment is due to the summation of the effects of vascular and Alzheimer lesions of the brain. More and more patients nowadays who are eligible for rt-PA are already known as demented at admission. A retrospective study conducted in a cohort of patients with dementia who had an ischaemic stroke and were treated by rtPA suggested that there is no increased risk of cerebral bleeding and death as compared with non demented patients. However, pre-existing cognitive impairment is possibly associated with (i) an increased risk of bleeding in patients with cognitive impairment, and (ii) a higher sensitivity to the neurotoxic effect of rt-PA on the brain tissue. Japanese patients differ from European patients by a higher risk of spontaneous intracranial haemorrhage, and a higher proportion of patients with small-vessel diseases. The primary objective of the OPHELIE-COG study is to determine whether ischaemic stroke patients who are treated with i.v. rt-PA are more likely to have a poor outcome (defined as a modified Rankin scale 2 to 6 at month 3) in the presence of pre-existing cognitive impairment or dementia. The secondary objectives are to determine whether (i) they have an increased risk of symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhages, (ii) the proportion of patients who have a poor outcome is lower than expected from the placebo group of randomised trials for patients with a similar range of baseline severity, and (iii) the influence of the cognitive state on outcome differs between Japanese and European patients.