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Active clinical trials for "Hemorrhage"

Results 511-520 of 2870

Brain PERfusion Evaluation by Contrast-Enhanced UltraSound

Cerebral HemorrhageSubarachnoid Hemorrhage3 more

The objective of the study is to assess brain tissue perfusion by contrast-enhanced ultrasound perfusion imaging (PerCEUS) in acute brain injuries. More precisely, it aims : to evaluate the heterogeneity of brain perfusion and thus diagnose brain tissue hypoperfusion with contrast-enhanced ultrasound. to correlate contrast-enhanced ultrasound with perfusion measurements by usual multimodal monitoring.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Mild Head Trauma in the Emergency Room: Assessment of the Risk of Intracranial Hemorrhage in Patients...

Head Trauma Injury

The clinical signs presented by a patient with a mild head injury are highly variable but remain strongly predictive of brain damage. The reference examination for the diagnosis of post-traumatic intracranial hemorrhage is currently the cerebral scanner without injection of contrast medium. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) tends to surpass CT in equipped centers, except for suspected bone lesions. The time required to perform brain imaging depends on the patient's clinical condition, comorbidities and treatments. The responsibility of antiplatelet agents in post-traumatic intracranial hemorrhage is currently discussed, particularly with aspirin. The hypothesis is that there is no significant difference in the proportion of intracranial hemorrhage in patients on antiplatelet agents after mild head trauma, in the absence of other factors favoring the occurrence of intracranial hemorrhage.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Osmotic Therapy for Patients With Severe Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Subarachnoid HemorrhageTraumatic

The goal of this prospective multi-center observational study is to learn about the osmotic therapy in severe subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). The main question[s] it aims to answer are: • whether the two osmotic therapy, 20% mannitol and 10% hypertonic saline(HTS), under the same osmotic equivalent, has similar influence on the outcome of SAH patients? Participants will be given proper treatment according to local expert consensus, including the choice of osmotic medicine. Investigators just record and analyse the data, compare mannitol group and HTS group to see if the outcome of latter is not worse than the former.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Taiwan Associated Genetic and Nongenetic Small Vessel Disease

Cerebral Small Vessel DiseasesCadasil6 more

The TAG-SVD enrolled patients with clinical and neuroimaging features of cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD). All enrolled patients will receive next-generation sequence (NGS) with probes designed to target five candidate CSVD genes, and patients will be divided into genetic or non-genetic groups accordingly. Their clinical features and outcome will be followed for at least 2 years.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Characteristics of Signal Intensity Gradient in Subarachnoid Hemorrhage After Aneurysmal Rupture...

Aneurysmal Rupture

10-20% of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage die before they arrive at the hospital, and about 25% die within 24 hours. About 1% of patients are diagnosed with cerebral aneurysms in imaging tests for health checkups, and many of them experience aneurysmal rupture during their lifetime, so it is not a rare disease. Wall shear stress is known to be a factor that reflects the state of blood vessels, and particularly plays an important role in the patency of the intima of blood vessels. In the meantime, computed fluid dynamics (CFD), a representative method for calculating wall shear stress, assumes a virtual rigid pipe and applies a preset value. This does not accurately reflect the physiological and dynamic state of the actual blood vessel. The investigators intend to measure the patient's wall shear stress using the SIG of the MRA-TOF technique, which reflects the physiological characteristics of individual patients, and to analyze the association with rupture of the intracranial aneurysm.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Neonatal Seizure Registry, GEnetics of Post-Neonatal Epilepsy

Neonatal SeizureHypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy4 more

The NSR-GENE study is a longitudinal cohort study of approximately 300 parent-child trios from the Neonatal Seizure Registry and participating site outpatient clinics that aims to evaluate whether and how genes alter the risk of post-neonatal epilepsy among children with acute provoked neonatal seizures. The researchers aim to develop prediction rules to stratify neonates into low, medium, and high risk for post-neonatal epilepsy based on clinical, electroencephalogram (EEG), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and genetic risk factors.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Intraoperative Estimated Blood Loss, Blood Transfusion, and Postoperative Clinical Outcomes in Patients...

General SurgeryBlood Loss1 more

After review literature, Siriraj hospital has not unanimous protocol to guide proper preoperative anemia and blood transfusion. This retrospective study will review non-cardiac surgery cases and collect data such as demographic data, surgical procedures, anesthetic techniques, preoperative hemoglobin level, intraoperative estimate blood loss, blood transfusion, and post operative complication in Siriraj hospital which has many patients undergo various operations. This study can be model to develop preoperative anemia management guideline in Siriraj Preanesthesia Assessment Center (SIPAC), Siriraj hospital and reduce risk and adverse outcomes after blood transfusion in the future.

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Brain Hemorrhage and Functional Outcome in Stroke Patients With CAA Features on Pre-thrombolysis...

HemorrhageCerebral Amyloid Angiopathy1 more

Background: In stroke patients treated with intravenous thrombolysis (IVT), presence and high number of strictly lobar cerebral microbleeds (compatible with cerebral amyloid angiopathy, CAA) seems to be associated with increased risk of hemorrhagic transformation, symptomatic hemorrhagic transformation, remote hemorrhage, and poor functional outcome. Some of these reported CAA patients with cerebral microbleeds also had chronic lobar intracerebral haemorrhage. Few data is available on IVT-treated CAA patients showing cortical superficial siderosis. There are no reports studying factors associated with brain hemorrhagic complication or functional outcome inside a group of IVT-treated CAA patients. Our aim was to evaluate brain hemorrhagic complications on 24h-CT and functional outcome after IVT in stroke patients with CAA features on pre-IVT MRI. Methods: In our stroke center, IVT decision in patients with CAA MRI features is left at the discretion of the treating physician. We retrospectively screened pre-IVT imaging of 959 consecutive IVT-treated stroke patients (between January 2015 and July 2022) without ongoing anticoagulation therapy for probable CAA MRI features defined by modified Boston criteria. After exclusion of 119 patients with lacking MRI (n=47), with MRI showing motion artefacts (n=49) or with alternative chronic brain hemorrhage cause on MRI (n=23), 15 IVT-treated patients with probable CAA on pre-IVT MRI were identified. In these 15 patients, clinical, biological and MRI characteristics were compared between patients with vs. without post-IVT hemorrhage and between patients with poor (MRS 3-6) vs. good (MRS 0-2) functional outcome at discharge.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Narcotrend and Cerebral Function Analysing Monitor in Intensive Care to Monitor Seizures...

Traumatic Brain InjurySubarachnoid Hemorrhage7 more

A study in the use of the Narcotrend depth of anaesthesia monitor to record a) seizures, and b) monitor a level of sedation referred to as 'burst suppression', in sedated patients in the adult and paediatric intensive care. Studies have shown that patients in coma on the intensive care unit may have subclinical in addition to clinical seizures. Subclinical seizures are seizures that do not show any outward signs and may go undetected. The current gold standard of recording seizures in the intensive care unit is by non-invasive, continuous monitoring of the electrical activity of the brain by electroencephalography (cEEG) using cerebral function analysing monitor (CFAM). This is recorded with simultaneous video recording and is performed by Clinical Neurophysiology departments. There has been a steady increase in demand for this service over recent years. Additionally, CFAM / cEEG is labour intensive and expensive. If trends continue, the proportion of hospitals offering CFAM / cEEG will continue to rise, creating increased demand for specialist staff, of which there are a finite number. Depth of anaesthesia monitors are used by anaesthetists to assess the level of anaesthesia in sedated patients using specialised, automated EEG analysis and are now recommended by NICE (DG6) to tailor anaesthetic dose to individual patients. This study aims to investigate the utility of the Narcotrend depth of anaesthesia monitor to monitor for seizures and burst suppression on the adult and paediatric intensive care unit. These monitors are cheaper and more widely available with the scope to be used at every bed space requiring neuro observation on the intensive care unit. The study aims to recruit all patients who are referred for CFAM / cEEG monitoring at Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) Trust over a 12 month period. These patients will undergo simultaneous recording using CFAM / cEEG and depth of anaesthesia monitoring.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Research of Optimal Cerebral Perfusion Pressure Diagnosis

TraumaBrain1 more

The research will investigate the hypothesis that timely identification of the optimal value of the cerebral perfusion pressure (optCPP) or optimal arterial blood pressure (optABP) is possible after detecting informative episodes of arterial blood pressure (ABP) that reflects the physiological autoregulatory reactions of the cerebral blood flow, This biomedical study will be conducted to test this hypothesis and to develop an algorithm for identification of optimal brain perfusion pressure within limited time (several tens of minutes). The goal of this observational study is to test the method of timely optimal cerebral perfusion pressure value or optimal arterial pressure value in intensive care patients after brain surgery. The main question it aims to answer are: how long it takes to identify optimal cerebral perfusion value when arterial blood pressure is changing within safe physiological limits. Objectives of the study To perform a prospective observational study by collecting multimodal physiological brain monitoring data: intracranial pressure (ICP), arterial blood pressure (ABP), End-tidal carbon dioxide (ETCO2), cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV), ECG. To perform a retrospective analysis of the accumulated clinical monitoring data, in order to create an algorithm for the identification of informative monitoring data fragments, according to which it would be possible to identify the optimal cerebral perfusion pressure (optCPP) value in a limited time interval (within a few or a dozen minutes). To perform a retrospective analysis of accumulated clinical monitoring data, determining correlations of cerebral blood flow autoregulation and optCPP-related parameters with the clinical outcome of patients and with the risk of cerebral vasospasm or cerebral ischemia.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria
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