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Active clinical trials for "Brain Injuries"

Results 1121-1130 of 2049

Botulinum Toxin and Saliva Management in Tracheotomised Patients

Traumatic Brain Injury

TITLE A randomised placebo controlled trial to explore the effectiveness of Botulinum Toxin injection at reducing oral secretions and frequency of tracheal suctioning in tracheotomised patients. DESIGN Randomised controlled single blinded experimental design AIMS The purpose of this study is to determine if ultra-sounded guided injections of Botulinum Toxin into the salivary glands (Parotid and sub-mandibular glands) of patients with a tracheostomy tube in-situ assists in the reduction of oral secretions. OUTCOME MEASURES Amount of saliva production / frequency of tracheal suctioning / questionnaires. POPULATION In-patients at the Wellington Hospital based in London will be invited to participate within the study. Participants will be recruited from a range of wards which will include the Intensive Treatment Unit (ITU), acute medical wards and rehabilitation wards. All participants will have a tracheostomy tube in-situ and be breathing on room air, without the need for any mechanical ventilation. Participants will be receiving tracheal suctioning to assist in the clearance of saliva to maintain a clear airway. A total of 40 participants will be recruited to the study across a two year period. Each participant will have no prior history of the following: swallowing disorders stroke myocardial infarction head or neck surgery respiratory disease acute or progressive neurological disease structural abnormalities that could affect swallowing other medical conditions requiring medication that could affect swallowing. ELIGIBILITY Male and female adults over the age of 18 years TREATMENT Injection of Botulinum Toxin into both pairs of the parotid salivary glands and submandibular glands, using ultrasound guidance DURATION Data collection over a two year period / six weeks for each participant

Withdrawn18 enrollment criteria

Use of Adipose-Derived Stem/Stromal Cells in Concussion and Traumatic Brain Injuries

Traumatic EncephalopathiesChronic8 more

Concussion is the most common type of brain injury throughout life. Study is seeking improvement of long-term residua following adolescent and adult post-traumatic injuries often associated with contact sports and accidental causes. Typically defined as reversible head injury with temporary loss of brain function. Symptoms range from physical, cognitive, pain (headache) and emotional signs consistent with TBI and Post-Traumatic Stress Syndrome. Use of AD-cSVF parenteral delivery to encourage repair of damage and decreased function following concussion, particularly in contact, repetitive sports injuries. Range of damage is measured in Grade I-III according to graduated severity. Unfortunately, less information is available about repetitive concussions and the long-term health issues.

Withdrawn12 enrollment criteria

The Norwegian Acute Stroke Prehospital Project

Acute StrokeTraumatic Brain Injury

The main aim of the NASPP study is to assess the efficacy and safety of the prehospital diagnosis of stroke using the Norwegian stroke ambulance concept. NASPP aims to demonstrate that anesthesiologists trained in pre-hospital critical care may perform acute stroke diagnostics by clinical assessment and CT scan interpretation and integrating these skills in the already existing organizational frame of the Norwegian prehospital EMS system. NASPP will systematically explore the Norwegian model of prehospital acute stroke diagnostics prior to the implementation of prehospital thrombolytic stroke treatment. NASSP will equip a regular ambulance staffed with a specially trained anesthesiologist and a specialized nurse. NASPP will perform the clinical part of the study in close co-operation with Østfold Hospital, Fredrikstad.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Correlation Between Circulating Biomarkers of Organs Damage and Intraoperative Hypotension Management...

HypotensionBrain Injuries2 more

Intraoperative hypotension (defined as mean arterial pressure below 65 mmHg) is associated with increased organs dysfunction and mortality. Even short durations of reduced arterial blood pressure episodes significantly increased the risk of myocardial injury, neurological deficits, renal failure, and mortality. Hypotension rate during surgery is quite common and recent studies showed an incidence up to 60% of patients endured hypotension during anesthesia for an average of 10% of surgical time. Nowadays hypotension seems to be preventable even if current management of the hypotensive episodes is predominantly reactive and rather occurs with some delay. The investigators hypothesize that the prevention of hypotension by means Edwards Lifesciences new technology (HPI software) can improve patients outcome after surgery. The present pilot randomized clinical trial is aimed at investigating various biomarkers involved in organ dysfunction and how they correlate with different intraoperative hypotension management strategies (Invasive blood pressure monitored by a normal arterial line vs Invasive blood pressure monitored by Edwards FloTracIQ system with HPI software).

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Recovering Together: Building Resiliency in Dyads of Patients Admitted to the Neuroscience Intensive...

Acute Brain Injuries

The investigators will compare a dyadic intervention (Recovering Together) with an attention placebo educational control in dyads of patients with acute neurological illnesses and their caregivers at risk for chronic emotional distress. The primary aim of this study is to determine the feasibility, credibility, and satisfaction with Recovering Together. The second aim is to show proof of concept for sustained improvement in emotional distress, post traumatic stress (PTS), resiliency and interpersonal communication outcomes in patients and caregivers.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Decompressive Craniectomy for Severe Traumatic Brain Injury in Children With Refractory Intracranial...

Hypertension Intracranial

Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of mortality and severe disability in the pediatric population. The prognosis of these patients depends on the severity of the initial lesions but also on the effectiveness of the therapies used to prevent or at least limit secondary lesions mainly intracranial hypertension (HTIC). The medical therapeutic strategy for the control of HTIC in children with TBI is well codified: starting with hyperosmolar therapy, then hyperventilation and ultimately the use of barbiturates to deepen sedation. However, these therapies are not devoid of adverse effects (hypernatremia, cerebral hypoxemia, systemic vasodilation) and, for some, their efficacy is diminished over time. When these treatments are insufficient to lower intracranial pressure (ICP), decompressive craniectomy is proposed. Decompressive craniectomy is used in a well-coded manner in malignant ischemic stroke in adults. In TBI, to date, there are two randomized studies in adults and one in children but with a small number of patients, evaluating the benefit of decompressive craniectomy. None of them showed significantly superiority of the surgery compared to the maximal medication treatment on the functional prognosis in the medium term. However, these studies have many biases, including a significant cross-over from the conservative treatment group to the surgery arm. Nevertheless, the pediatric literature on the subject seems to yield better results on neurological prognosis in the long term. There are guidelines on the medical management of childhood TBI published by the National Institute of Health in 2012, which emphasize the need for controlled and randomized studies to define the place of decompressive craniectomy in children. That is why the investigators are proposing this national multicentre study.

Withdrawn10 enrollment criteria

Reducing Hemodialysis Induced Recurrent Brain Injury to Improve Patients' Lives

Chronic Kidney Disease

Patients who receive dialysis for kidney failure suffer severe cognitive impairment. Hemodialysis causes circulatory stress and ischemia, which causes severe brain injury. It has been demonstrated that a procedure known as Remote Ischemic Preconditioning(RIPC), which involves wrapping a blood pressure cuff around a patient's leg and inflating has the potential of protecting many organs, such as the heart from the effects of dialysis. Our study aims to investigate this phenomenon to determine the extent to which it provides protection to a dialysis patient's brain.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Protection Against Potential Brain Injury During Competitive Football

Concussion

Significant morbidity, mortality, and related costs are caused by traumatic brain injury (TBI). An externally-worn medical device that applies mild jugular compression according to the principle of the Queckenstedt Maneuver (the Device). Preliminary research suggests that the Device has the potential to reduce the likelihood of TBI. The currently developed collar has been approved for studies in humans and the results indicate safety for use during high demand and maximal exertion activities, This study will investigate the effectiveness of this device in high school athletes playing a collision sport such as football. The use of helmets during such a high-risk sport will allow for collision measurement devices to be embedded in the helmet and will not affect play or fit of equipment. Athletes participating in this study will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1) Device wearing during the season or 2) Non-device wearing during the season. The helmets of all participants will be outfitted with an accelerometer which will measure the magnitude of every impact to the head sustained by the athlete. Effectiveness of the device will be determined via differences in longitudinal brain imaging and functional testing following competitive football participation. A subset of athletes who report a diagnosed concussion will also receive additional brain neuroanatomical and neurophysiological testing within a week following the diagnosed concussive event. The purpose of the study is to monitor longitudinal changes in brain structure and function between the preseason and postseason, in a population of football playing athletes wearing the Device and compared to a similar population not wearing the device. Secondly, the purpose is to determine the protection of the device relative to amount and magnitude of sustained head impacts.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Exogenous Sodium Lactate Infusion in Traumatic Brain Injury (ELI-TBI)

Brain InjuriesTraumatic

Metabolic crisis is a state of energy insufficiency due to impaired mitochondrial function as indicated by cerebral microdialysis lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR). We have performed preliminary mechanistic analysis of alternative fuels in humans and have demonstrated proof of concept that exogenous fuels alter brain metabolism. We will conduct a multicenter, adaptive design-based, proof of concept phase 2 safety study of candidate supplemental fuels in patients with severe traumatic brain injury to determine safety and efficacy.

Withdrawn17 enrollment criteria

Attention Intervention Management

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)4 more

This is a research study to learn if a computer-based intervention that provides direct attention and metacognitive strategy development can improve attention, memory, and executive control in adolescents with moderate-to-severe TBI who are experiencing attention difficulties post injury.

Withdrawn11 enrollment criteria
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