Enhancing Physical Therapy Best Practice for Improving Walking After Stroke
StrokeCerebral Infarction3 moreThe aim of this study is to assess the effect of implementing best practices into current stroke rehabilitation physical therapy on walking outcomes. Participants will also be provided an activity monitor to help them track and target their walking practice to determine if this can improve walking ability.
Revascularization Versus Optimal Medical Therapy of Chronic Total Coronary Occlusions on Left Ventricular...
Chronic Total Occlusion of Coronary ArteryRationale: Randomized trials could not yet establish favourable outcomes of CTO PCI on hard endpoints such as ejection fraction or mortality, when compared to optimal medical therapy. However, patients after CTO PCI appeared to be more frequently free of angina complaints, but the aetiology behind this is not fully understood. The investigators hypothesize that PCI of the CTO in patients preselected with an ischemic threshold (>12.5%) on cardiac imaging leads to a reduction of the ischemic burden and therefore an increased benefit on functional outcomes. Objective: Primary objective is to determine whether PCI of the CTO will yield a higher reduction of ischemia assessed by exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT-CT from baseline to 6-month follow-up compared to a control group. Secondary objectives are 1) to evaluate the effect of PCI of the CTO on improvement in functional status, infarct size and left ventricular function from baseline to follow-up compared to the control group; 2) to study the association between ischemia reduction and functional outcome and left ventricular function; 3) to assess the influence of the collateral flow index on the ischemic burden (reduction), functional status, infarct size and left ventricular (contractile) function (hibernation). Study design: open multicentre randomized trial Study population: 82 patients eligible for CTO PCI Intervention: CTO PCI Primary endpoint: ischemic burden assessed with exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT-CT from baseline to 6 months follow-up.
Time Window for Ischemic Stroke First Mobilization Effectiveness
Brain IschemiaStroke RehabilitationEarly mobilization was thought to be effective in patients with acute ischemic stroke. As the essential component of stroke unit care, early mobilization has already been part of routine clinical practice. However, it is uncertain that which and when medical service focusing on functional recovery should be delivered after the emergency interventions for stroke. Besides, the optimal time window, for delivering early mobilization after acute ischemic stroke, has not been verified with strong evidence.
CardiAMP Cell Therapy Chronic Myocardial Ischemia Trial
Refractory AnginaChronic Myocardial IschemiaProspective, multi-center, 2:1 randomized (Treatment : Sham Control), sham-controlled, double-blinded trial to compare treatment using the CardiAMP cell therapy system to sham treatment Treatment Group: Subjects treated with aBMC using the CardiAMP cell therapy system Sham Control Group: Subjects treated with a Sham Treatment (no introduction of the Helix transendocardial delivery catheter, no administration of aBMC)
Improving Neuroprotective Strategy for Ischemic Stroke With Poor Recanalization After Thrombectomy...
Ischemic StrokeIn 2015, five randomized trials showed efficacy of endovascular thrombectomy over standard medical care in patients with acute ischemic stroke caused by occlusion of arteries of the proximal anterior circulation. However, sufficient recanalization (mTICI2b-3) can 't be acquired in all patients under thrombectomy. There is a lack of evidence that whether salvage intra-arterial thrombolysis is beneficial for patients with insufficient recanalization after endovascular thrombectomy. The EXTEND-IA TNK study indicated that tenecteplase before thrombectomy was associated with a higher incidence of reperfusion and better functional outcome than alteplase among patients with ischemic stroke treated within 4.5 hours after symptom onset. This study intends to explore the proportion of sufficient recanalization (2b/3) after intra-arterial tenecteplase administration in patients undergoing thrombectomy with insufficient recanalization (1/2a).
Improving Neuroprotective Strategy for Ischemic Stroke With Sufficient Recanalization After Thrombectomy...
Ischemic StrokeThrombolysis and endovascular thrombectomy are the most efficient treatments for acute ischemic stroke patients in time window. Although sufficient recanalization after thrombectomy is more than 80%, HERMES study indicated that nearly half of the ischemic stroke patients under thrombectomy suffered obvious disability. Artery reocclusion, hemorrhagic transformation, and no-reflow phenomenon are among the most important reasons of poor prognosis of acute ischemic stroke patients. The investigators speculate that a combination of argatroban, edaravone, and glucocorticoid may be helpful in preventing artery reocclusion, hemorrhagic transformation, and no-reflow phenomenon. This study intends to explore the safety, feasibility and efficacy of thrombectomy with sufficient recanalization bridged by intra-arterial cocktail therapy in acute ischemic stroke patients.
HOPE With Cytokine Filtration in Liver Transplantation (Cyto-HOPE)
Liver TransplantationPost-Reperfusion Syndrome2 moreIschemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is unavoidably typical of solid organ transplantation. Post-reperfusion syndrome (PRS), characterized by hemodynamic instability at reperfusion of the implanted graft, is a possible complication of liver transplantation. For sure, IRI plays a fundamental role in the multifactorial pathogenesis of PRS. IRI and PRS are associated with a higher risk of early allograft dysfunction (EAD) and, consequently, graft failure. Liver grafts from both extended criteria donors (ECD) and donation after circulatory death (DCD) are particularly susceptible to IRI and, accordingly, are at higher risk of PRS, EAD and graft failure. Anyway, in the present scenario of organ shortage, such donors greatly contribute to enlarge the organ pool. So, various strategies have been developed for the purpose of a safer use of this kind of grafts. Among them, ex vivo hypothermic oxygenated perfusion (HOPE) reduces IRI and is beneficial for high-risk liver grafts. The pathogenesis of IRI is an extremely complex downstream inflammation process, involving many different cytokines, chemokines and growth factors. In particular, tumor necrosis factor-alfa (TNF-alfa), interleukin-6 (IL-6), IL-8 and endothelin-1 (ET-1) are crucial in the development of IRI in liver transplantation. In experimental models, cytokine filtration during ex vivo lung perfusion (EVLP) was proved to be safe and effective in reducing inflammatory response and, thus, pulmonary edema development. Since in liver transplantation, IRI and PRS are associated with a higher risk of EAD and graft failure liver grafts from ECD and DCD are particularly susceptible to IRI and are at higher risk of PRS, EAD and graft failure HOPE of high-risk liver grafts reduces IRI in solid organ transplantation, various cytokines, chemokines and growth factors are involved in the pathogenesis of IRI in experimental models of EVLP, cytokine filtration was proved to reduce inflammatory response and subsequent organ damage, our hypothesis is that cytokine filtration during HOPE of high-risk liver grafts may potentiate the beneficial effects of HOPE, further reducing IRI and, consequently, further decreasing the incidence of PRS and EAD. So, the aim of this study is to verify the feasibility and safety of cytokine filtration during end-ischemic HOPE of liver grafts.
Evaluation of a Strategy Guided by Imaging Versus Systematic Coronary Angiography in Elderly Patients...
Myocardial InfarctionThe WHO predicts that cardiovascular morbi-mortality will increase by 120-137% within 20 years due to the aging population. Myocardial infarction without ST segment elevation (NSTEMI) is the most common form of infarction. However, its treatment among elderly patients remains a challenging question. Indeed, the risk benefit balance of revascularization remains unclear, and complications related to revascularization are more frequent in the elderly, including MI, heart failure, stroke, renal failure and bleeding according to National Cardiovascular Network data.The last randomized controlled trial "After Eighty Study", showed a reduction of major cardio-cerebrovascular events (MACCEs) in NSTEMI patients with an invasive strategy (systematic coronary angiography - CA) compared to a conservative strategy (medical treatment alone). Nevertheless, this study presented several limitations of which a major one was the lack of a definition of frailty at inclusion. Moreover, the "After Eighty Study" has shown that percutaneous revascularization in the invasive arm was only performed for 1 in 2 patients showing an inadequacy in the strategy for selecting candidates for revascularization. Consequently, despite European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines, the management of NSTEMI in elderly patients is not yet evidence based, and current recommendations do not provide any clear clinical decision rule indicating one strategy over another. For fragile patients, an alternative strategy consists of selecting candidates for a guided CA according to the extent of myocardial ischemia, identified by non-invasive imaging. Single-photon emission computed tomography or dobutamine stress echocardiograms are currently the reference methods with well-defined interpretation of ischemia. According to our experience, this strategy avoids CA for one third of patients and improves the rate of revascularization. The aim of our study is to compare 1-year morbidity and mortality in NSTEMI patients over 80 years, assigned to guided versus systematic-CA. Our hypothesis is that the guided strategy will not be inferior on MACE rates at 1 year, and will be cost-effective by reducing iatrogenic complications.
Remote Ischemic Conditioning With Local Ischemic Postconditioning in High-Risk ST-elevation Myocardial...
ST Elevation Myocardial InfarctionThe RIP-HIGH trial is a two-arm randomized controlled trial aiming to compare the impact of combined remote ischemic conditioning (RIP) and local ischemic postconditioning (PostC) vs. standard of care on clinical outcome in high-risk ST-elevation myocardial infarction patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention.
Umbilical Cord-derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Ischemic Stroke
Ischemic StrokeThis is a doble blind, placebo controlled clinical trial to assess safety and efficacy of intravenous administration of Umbilical cord-derived Mesenchymal Stem cells in patients with ischemic stroke within 6 months of onset.