China Research for Severe Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage(CRISIH)
Severe Spontaneous Intracranial HemorrhageLong-term Antiplatelet Treatment2 moreBackground: Despite the capability of emergency surgery to reduce the mortality of severe spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage (SSICH) patients, the effect and safety of surgical treatment for severe spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage (SSICH) patients receiving long-term oral antiplatelet treatment (LOAPT) remains unclear. In consideration of this, the cohort study is aimed at figuring out the effect and safety of emergency surgery for SSICH patients on LOAPT. Methods: As a multicenter and prospective cohort study, it will be conducted across 7 representative clinical centers. Starting in September 2019, the observation is scheduled to be completed by December 2022, with a total of 450 SSICH patients recruited. The information on clinical, radiological, and laboratory practices will be recorded objectively. All of the patients will be monitored until death or 6 months after the occurrence of primary hemorrhage. Study Design: In this study, two comparative cohorts and an observational cohort will be set up. The primary outcome is the effect of emergency surgery, which is subject to assessment using the total mortality and comparison in the survival rate of SSICH patients on LOAPT between surgical treatment and conservative treatment. The second outcome is the safety of surgery, with the postoperative hemorrhagic complication which is compared between the operated SSICH patients on and not on LOAPT. Based on the observation of the characteristics and outcome of SSICH patients on LOAPT, the ischemic events after discontinuing LOAPT will be further addressed, and the coagulation function assessment system for operated SSICH patients on LOAPT will be established. Objective: In this study, investigators will estimate the effect and safety of emergency surgery for SSICH patients on LOAPT, which will provide an evidence for management in the future.
Addressing Real-world Anticoagulant Management Issues in Stroke
StrokeCerebrovascular Stroke1 moreThe Addressing Real-world Anticoagulant Management Issues in Stroke (ARAMIS) registry is designed to provide important and timely insight into the management of acute stroke patients who are on novel oral anticoagulants in community practice.
Prognosis in Intracerebral Hemorrhage. The ICHCat Score in Primary Care.
Intracerebral HemorrhageOutcome3 moreThe clinical evidence shows that patients with a first episode of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) are increasingly old and with greater comorbidity with a recognized impact over mortality. The prediction of the outcome of ICH is not only crucial in the emergin attention to identify those patients with favorable criteria that can benefit from possible treatments; but also after hospital discharge, in primary care where the prediction should facilitate the organization and management of a wide variety of resources: familiar, health and social welfare. Even though there are different scales that predict mortality, these are not sufficiently useful in choosing a treatment or do not provide sufficient data to the family to decide. Due to the characteristics of the population with ICH described in these works, it seems useful to propose a prognostic index (ICHCat) to identify the variables associated to its incidence and mortality and that, in addition, to make adjustments in the comparisons of the survival between different series of patients or different treatment modalities in primary care.
Hemodynamics and Vital Organ Function in Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Balanced AnesthesiaIntracerebral Hemorrhage1 moreSpontaneous non-traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a common symptom in clinical practice and is the most serious among all types of stroke.Recently, as a relatively mainstream and recognized INTERACT2 (five well-known international studies in the cerebrovascular field: IMS-III, MR RESCUE, SYNTHESIS EXPANSION, INTERACT2, CHANCE) studies have shown that in patients with standard systolic blood pressure Early intensive antihypertensive therapy does not increase the incidence of death or serious adverse events. The above studies confirm the safety and efficacy of early potent depression.In 2017, Anesthesiology published a META analysis of intraoperative hypotension and blood pressure versus baseline fluctuations. The final outcome showed that 20% of blood pressure in the study was similar to MAP <65 mmHg, regardless of the duration of the duration There will be postoperative myocardial and renal damage. Ischemia is a very important cause of organ damage. Myocardial injury is closely related to the level of mean arterial pressure, while ischemia and ischemic reperfusion injury are closely related to postoperative acute renal injury.There is no targeted guideline for ICH perioperative blood pressure management, especially intraoperative blood pressure management, and no previous studies have studied most of the studies involving ICH patients with conservative treatment, ICH patients with surgical treatment There are few reports on blood pressure control during surgery.
Evaluation of Minimally Invasive Subcortical Parafascicular Access for Clot Evacuation
Cerebral HemorrhageIntracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is the most severe form of stroke: early mortality is 40%, and 80%-of survivors are physically disabled with high rates of cognitive impairment and depression. In an effort to address the issues with conventional treatments, a new integrated systematic approach has been developed. This approach utilizes an educational process where specific core competencies (pillars) of mapping, navigation, access, optics and automated resection have been integrated into a single standardized system to deliver targeted therapy for an individual patient based on location and patient factors. This system has demonstrated safety and efficacy in oncology patients and is also FDA approved for use in the ICH patient population as well. This registry will collect data form multiple site that preform the MiSPACE procedure as part of clinical care. The intent of this registry is to collect data on the economic impact as well as clinical outcomes using the MiSPACE approach with the integrated technology in the early treatment of ICH.
Prevention of Venous Thromboembolism in Patients With Acute Primary Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Intracerebral HemorrhageTo evaluate the efficacy of using IPC during the acute phase of ICH in the prevention of VTE. To assess the safety and efficacy of additional therapy with enoxaparin. To compare the efficacy and safety of the European and American guideline recommendations. To provide an efficient and safe thromboprophylaxis for several weeks until the patient is able to walk.
DCS Study in Extremely Premature Newborns
Premature BirthExtremely Low Birth Weight3 moreWe are attempting to improve the cerebral monitoring of extremely low gestational age (ELGA) infants, such that in the future, real-time monitoring will be possible, to aid clinicians in their management of these infants. We wish to establish a new NIRS device, diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS), as a safe, noninvasive and informative bedside tool for assessing and monitoring brain health in ELGA infants during the first few days of life. It is hoped that this method will provide detailed information on changes in oxygen consumption and metabolism, and cerebral perfusion. This technique will have wide applicability, but for this research study we wish to focus on the effect of blood flow instabilities, intermittent hypotension and hypoxic episodes, pressure passive CBF periods, and hypoperfusion on the preterm brain during the first days of life, and their relationship with incidence of intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH). We aim to recruit 100 premature infants to obtain data to: Test the feasibility of NIRS-DCS to monitor cerebral activity, perfusion and oxygen consumption in extremely premature infants during the first week of life. To assess if these baseline values are impacted by intermittent hypoxic episodes. To assess if cerebral blood flow disturbances correlate with incidence of intraventricular hemorrhage. Correlate the NIRS-DCS findings with clinical outcome at hospital discharge.
Multicenter Analysis of Oral Anticoagulant-associated ICH - Part Two
Anticoagulation Associated (VKA & NOAC) Intracerebral HemorrhageIntracerebral hemorrhage [ICH] is the most feared complication of oral anticoagulation [OAC], yet therapeutic strategies are limited reflected by overall weak guideline recommendations. Studies investigating acute interventions especially in patients with ICH taking non-vitamin-K-oral-anticoagulants [NOAC] remain inconclusive. Further, acute management issues in OAC-ICH patients (hematoma evacuation surgery, prevention of acute thromboembolic events, intraventricular fibrinolysis) still need to be investigated. Therefore, this observational study (RETRACE-II) represents the follow-up investigation to RETRACE (German-wide Multicenter Analysis of Oral Anticoagulant-associated Intracerebral Hemorrhage, study-period 2006-2010, NCT01829581), now spanning a study-period from 2011 until 2015 with 19 participating tertiary care centers nation-wide in Germany. Data pooling of the two RETRACE studies, altogether including more than 2500 patients treated at 22 centers over a 10 year period will allow statistically appropriate analyses of different outcomes.
Effect and Safety of Surgical Intervention for Severe Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage Patients...
Severe Spontaneous Intracranial HemorrhageLong-term Antiplatelet Treatment2 moreBackground: Despite the capability of emergency surgery to reduce the mortality of severe spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage (SSICH) patients, the effect and safety of surgical treatment for severe spontaneous intracranial hemorrhage (SSICH) patients receiving long-term oral antiplatelet treatment (LOAPT) remains unclear. In consideration of this, the cohort study is aimed at figuring out the effect and safety of emergency surgery for SSICH patients on LOAPT. Methods: As a multicenter and prospective cohort study, it will be conducted across 7 representative clinical centers. Starting in September 2019, the observation is scheduled to be completed by December 2022, with a total of 450 SSIC H patients recruited. The information on clinical, radiological, and laboratory practices will be recorded objectively. All of the patients will be monitored until death or 6 months after the occurrence of primary hemorrhage. Results: In this study, two comparative cohorts and an observational cohort will be set up. The primary outcome is the effect of emergency surgery, which is subject to assessment using the total mortality and comparison in the survival rate of SSICH patients on LOAPT between surgical treatment and conservative treatment. The second outcome is the safety of surgery, with the postoperative hemorrhagic complication which is compared between the operated SSICH patients on and not on LOAPT. Based on the observation of the characteristics and outcome of SSICH patients on LOAPT, the ischemic events after discontinuing LOAPT will be further addressed, and the coagulation function assessment system for operated SSICH patients on LOAPT will be established. Conclusions: In this study, we will investigate the effect and safety of emergency surgery for SSICH patients on LOAPT, which will provide an evidence for management in the future.
Amyloid Imaging and Cognitive Impairment After Intracerebral Hemorrhage
Intracerebral HemorrhageTo evaluate Pet AV-45 Amyloid imaging in the etiological diagnosis of primary non traumatic intracerebral hemorrhage (Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy and hypertension related hemorrhage).We hypothesize that patients with lobar hemorrhage (probably related to Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy) will have a greater AV45 cortical binding than patients with deep hemorrhage (probably related to hypertension).