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Active clinical trials for "Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak"

Results 1-10 of 33

Comparison of Duration of CSF Leak in Post Traumatic Patients Managed by Early Lumbar Drain vs Conservative...

CSF Leakage

As limited data is available locally and internationally regarding early Lumbar drain and its effect on duration of CSF leak we have decided to compare it conservative treatment. By providing CSF an alternative route for drainage, the fistula site will remain dry. Leakage site won't be facing CSF pressure, and this will promote early healing of the wound.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Bed Rest on the Effect of CSF Leakage Repair After Transsphenoidal Pituitary Surgery

Adenoma PituitaryCSF Leakage

Postoperative cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage is a well-known complication that might occur after transnasal transsphenoidal adenomectomy at an incidence of 0.5-15% according to different literature reports. Persistent CSF leakage may lead to intracranial hypotension or meningitis, therefore aggressive management is mandatory. The treatment is immediate repair during transsphenoidal surgery once intraoperative CSF leakage is identified, with the adjunct of postoperative bed rest and/or lumbar drainage. However, due to the advances in endoscopic endonasal skull base surgery, some surgical teams have advocated that postoperative bed rest may not be necessary if appropriate repair have been performed. High-flow CSF leakage typically occurs in an extended endonasal approach to the anterior or posterior cranial fossa, whereas CSF leakage resulting from transsphenoidal pituitary surgery is usually easier to be repaired. Bed rest is stressful management for patients and poses increased risks in many ways, such as the need for an indwelling urinary catheter, musculoskeletal pain, affected sleep quality, and increased possibility of thromboembolism. It is crucial that the duration of bed rest be cut short or totally avoided if clinically acceptable. In reviewing the literature, there is insufficient evidence supporting the routine use of postoperative bed rest after CSF leakage repair in transsphenoidal surgery. This study aims to compare the efficacy of successful CSF leakage repair with or without postoperative bed rest with an open-label randomized trial design.

Enrolling by invitation9 enrollment criteria

Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of Dura Sealant Patch in Reducing CSF Leakage Following Elective...

Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak

The objective of the study is to clinically assess the safety and effectiveness of LIQOSEAL® as a means of reducing intra- as well as post-operative CSF leakage in patients undergoing elective cranial intradural surgery with a dural closure procedure to show noninferiority compared to a control group.

Recruiting27 enrollment criteria

Role of Novel RADA16 Hydrogel in Endoscopic Skull Base Surgery

Skull Base NeoplasmsCerebrospinal Fluid Leakage2 more

The purpose of this study is to specifically evaluate the effectiveness of PuraGel, a RADA16 polypeptide hydrogel, in expediting post-operative healing and re-mucosalization of the nasoseptal flap harvest site during endoscopic skull base surgery and the impact on patient and sinonasal morbidity.

Not yet recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Sonographic Monitoring of Weaning of Cerebrospinal Fluid Drainages

Hydrocephalus

As elaborated above only one study reported ultrasonographic changes of the width of the lateral ventricle during clamping of EVD/LD and indicated that ultrasound monitoring might be suitable. No firm data exists about the change of the width of the third ventricle, the diameter of the optic nerve or brain perfusion during clamping of the EVD/LD, although the width of these structures has been shown to depend on intracranial pressure. Ultrasonographic measurements of changes of the width of the third ventricle or the diameter of the optic nerve would have some advantages compared to the ultrasonographic assessments of the lateral ventricles. First, the width of the third ventricle can be measured easier and more reliable than the width of the lateral ventricles (better defined insonation plane and therefore higher repeatability of measurements) 3. Second, whereas assessments of the width of the side and third ventricles with ultrasound depend on the temporal bone windows (10 to 15% of patients have insufficient temporal bone windows), the measurement of the diameter of the optic nerve does not have this limitation and can therefore be performed in almost all patients. Hence, measurement of the diameter of the optic nerve would allow to overcome one major limitation of transcranial ultrasound. The latter limitation for transcranial ultrasound could also be minimized by the use of an ultrasound contrast agent (SonoVue®), but this was also not yet studied. The use of an ultrasound contrast agent would in addition allow to study changes of brain perfusion during clamping of EVD/LD.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Suturable DuraGen™ PMCF Study

Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak

The primary goal of this study is to retrospectively collect data on the safety and efficacy of Suturable DuraGen™.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

The Paediatric EVICEL® Neuro Study

CSF Leak

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of EVICEL® when used for suture-line sealing in dura-mater closure in elective or urgent paediatric cranial neurosurgery to provide intraoperative watertight closure.

Terminated25 enrollment criteria

A Randomized Trial of CT Fluoroscopy-guided Targeted Autologous Blood and Fibrin Glue Patching for...

Cerebrospinal Fluid Leaks

The goal of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to compare the efficacy of CT fluoroscopy-guided targeted epidural patching for treatment of imaging-confirmed spinal CSF leaks to that of a simulated procedure without patching material in patients with spontaneous intracranial hypotension.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Cerebrospinal Fluid Drainage (CSFD) in Acute Spinal Cord Injury

Spinal Cord Injury

The purpose of this Phase IIB randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of CSFD and to provide a preliminary clinical efficacy evaluation of the combination of CSFD and elevation of mean arterial pressure (MAP) in patients with acute spinal cord injury (SCI). The objectives of the trial are to evaluate (i) efficacy of reducing intrathecal pressure (ITP) by CSFD in patients with acute SCI; (ii) preliminary efficacy of combination of CSFD and elevation of MAP compared to elevation of MAP alone in improving neurologic motor outcomes in patients with acute SCI; and, (iii) safety of intensive CSFD in acute SCI patients.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

TASALL - TachoSil® Against Liquor Leak

Cerebrospinal Fluid Leaks

The primary objective is to demonstrate superiority of TachoSil® compared to current practice as an adjunct in sealing the dura mater. The efficacy of the dura mater sealing must be evaluated post-operatively. The secondary objective is to evaluate the safety of TachoSil® as an adjunct in sealing the dura mater. The trial population will consist of 726 randomised (1:1) patients elected for skull base surgery. The trial duration consists of screening, surgery, efficacy follow-up after 7±1 weeks and safety follow-up 28±2 weeks after surgery.

Completed26 enrollment criteria
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