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15,721
result(s) for
"Cerebral infarction"
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Trial of Thrombectomy for Stroke with a Large Infarct of Unrestricted Size
by
Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire de Nancy (CHRU Nancy)
,
Nouri, Nasreddine
,
Vega, Pedro
in
Acute Disease
,
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
2024
In patients with acute stroke and a large infarct of unrestricted size, use of thrombectomy and medical care within 7 hours after symptom onset led to better functional outcomes and lower mortality than medical care alone.
Journal Article
Hemicraniectomy in Older Patients with Extensive Middle-Cerebral-Artery Stroke
by
Luntz, Steffen
,
Hacke, Werner
,
Unterberg, Andreas
in
Aged
,
Aged, 80 and over
,
Biological and medical sciences
2014
In patients older than 60 years of age with extensive middle-cerebral-artery strokes, early hemicraniectomy improved survival as compared with treatment in the ICU alone. The majority of survivors had substantial disability and required assistance with most bodily needs.
Large space-occupying middle-cerebral-artery or hemispheric ischemic brain infarcts are associated with the development of massive brain edema, which may lead to herniation and early death. This condition, which has been described as malignant middle-cerebral-artery infarction, is associated with 80% mortality due to herniation during the first week, despite maximal conservative treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU), including osmotherapy, barbiturates, and hyperventilation.
1
–
8
Conservative therapies for ischemic brain edema are not supported by sufficient evidence from clinical trials.
9
,
10
Decompressive hemicraniectomy (temporary removal of a large part of the skull) combined with duraplasty allows edematous tissue to expand outside the . . .
Journal Article
Endovascular Treatment for Stroke Due to Occlusion of Medium or Distal Vessels
2025
In this trial involving 543 patients with stroke due to occlusion of medium or distal vessels, endovascular treatment within 24 hours after the onset of symptoms was not effective in improving functional outcome at 90 days.
Journal Article
Safety and efficacy of intravenous glyburide on brain swelling after large hemispheric infarction (GAMES-RP): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2 trial
by
Simard, J Marc
,
Sheth, Kevin N
,
Kimberly, W Taylor
in
Administration, Intravenous
,
Aged
,
Brain Edema - diagnostic imaging
2016
Preclinical models of stroke have shown that intravenous glyburide reduces brain swelling and improves survival. We assessed whether intravenous glyburide (RP-1127; glibenclamide) would safely reduce brain swelling, decrease the need for decompressive craniectomy, and improve clinical outcomes in patients presenting with a large hemispheric infarction.
For this double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled phase 2 trial, we enrolled patients (aged 18–80 years) with a clinical diagnosis of large anterior circulation hemispheric infarction for less than 10 h and baseline diffusion-weighted MRI image lesion volume of 82–300 cm3 on MRI at 18 hospitals in the USA. We used web-based randomisation (1:1) to allocate patients to the placebo or intravenous glyburide group. Intravenous glyburide was given as a 0·13 mg bolus intravenous injection for the first 2 min, followed by an infusion of 0·16 mg/h for the first 6 h and then 0·11 mg/h for the remaining 66 h. The primary efficacy outcome was the proportion of patients who achieved a modified Rankin Scale (mRS) score of 0–4 at 90 days without undergoing decompressive craniectomy. Analysis was by per protocol. Safety analysis included all randomly assigned patients who received the study drug. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01794182.
Between May 3, 2013, and April 30, 2015, 86 patients were randomly assigned but enrolment was stopped because of funding reasons. The funder, principal investigators, site investigators, patients, imaging core, and outcomes personnel were masked to treatment. The per-protocol study population was 41 participants who received intravenous glyburide and 36 participants who received placebo. 17 (41%) patients in the intravenous glyburide group and 14 (39%) in the placebo group had an mRS score of 0–4 at 90 days without decompressive craniectomy (adjusted odds ratio 0·87, 95% CI 0·32–2·32; p=0·77). Ten (23%) of 44 participants in the intravenous glyburide group and ten (26%) of 39 participants in the placebo group had cardiac events (p=0·76), and four of 20 had serious adverse events (two in the intravenous glyburide group and two in the placebo group, p=1·00). One cardiac death occurred in each group (p=1·00).
Intravenous glyburide was well tolerated in patients with large hemispheric stroke at risk for cerebral oedema. There was no difference in the composite primary outcome. Further study is warranted to assess the potential clinical benefit of a reduction in swelling by intravenous glyburide.
Remedy Pharmaceuticals.
Journal Article
Trial of Endovascular Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke with Large Infarct
by
Luo, Gang
,
Nguyen, Thanh N.
,
Liao, Geng
in
Blood clots
,
Brain Ischemia - drug therapy
,
Brain Ischemia - surgery
2023
In a trial conducted in China, patients with large cerebral infarctions as determined by imaging criteria within 24 hours after onset had better outcomes with endovascular therapy than with medical therapy alone.
Journal Article
Thrombectomy 6 to 24 Hours after Stroke with a Mismatch between Deficit and Infarct
2018
Among patients with occlusion of a large intracerebral vessel who had a clinical deficit that was disproportionately severe relative to the infarct volume, 90-day outcomes for disability were better with late thrombectomy plus standard care than with standard care alone.
Journal Article
Endovascular Treatment of Stroke Due to Medium-Vessel Occlusion
2025
In a trial involving patients with ischemic stroke due to medium-vessel occlusion, thrombectomy within 12 hours did not lead to a better functional outcome and lower mortality at 90 days than usual care.
Journal Article
Tenecteplase for Stroke at 4.5 to 24 Hours with Perfusion-Imaging Selection
by
Schwamm, Lee H.
,
Albers, Gregory W.
,
Kim, Minjee
in
Body weight
,
Brain - blood supply
,
Brain - diagnostic imaging
2024
Tenecteplase for thrombolysis in a 4.5-to-24-hour window did not improve disability outcomes at 90 days in patients with ischemic stroke who had been chosen on the basis of imaging. Most patients had endovascular thrombectomy.
Journal Article
Cilostazol for prevention of secondary stroke (CSPS 2): an aspirin-controlled, double-blind, randomised non-inferiority trial
2010
The antiplatelet drug cilostazol is efficacious for prevention of stroke recurrence compared with placebo. We designed the second Cilostazol Stroke Prevention Study (CSPS 2) to establish non-inferiority of cilostazol versus aspirin for prevention of stroke, and to compare the efficacy and safety of cilostazol and aspirin in patients with non-cardioembolic ischaemic stroke.
Patients aged 20–79 years who had had a cerebral infarction within the previous 26 weeks were enrolled at 278 sites in Japan and allocated to receive 100 mg cilostazol twice daily or 81 mg aspirin once daily for 1–5 years. Patients were allocated according to a computer-generated randomisation sequence by means of a dynamic balancing method using patient information obtained at registration. All patients, study personnel, investigators, and the sponsor were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was the first occurrence of stroke (cerebral infarction, cerebral haemorrhage, or subarachnoid haemorrhage). The predefined margin of non-inferiority was an upper 95% CI limit for the hazard ratio of 1·33. Analyses were by full-analysis set. This trial is registered with
ClinicalTrials.gov, number
NCT00234065.
Between December, 2003, and October, 2006, 2757 patients were enrolled and randomly allocated to receive cilostazol (n=1379) or aspirin (n=1378), of whom 1337 on cilostazol and 1335 on aspirin were included in analyses; mean follow-up was 29 months (SD 16). The primary endpoint occurred at yearly rates of 2·76% (n=82) in the cilostazol group and 3·71% (n=119) in the aspirin group (hazard ratio 0·743, 95% CI 0·564–0·981; p=0·0357). Haemorrhagic events (cerebral haemorrhage, subarachnoid haemorrhage, or haemorrhage requiring hospital admission) occurred in fewer patients on cilostazol (0·77%, n=23) than on aspirin (1·78%, n=57; 0·458, 0·296–0·711; p=0·0004), but headache, diarrhoea, palpitation, dizziness, and tachycardia were more frequent in the cilostazol group than in the aspirin group.
Cilostazol seems to be non-inferior, and might be superior, to aspirin for prevention of stroke after an ischaemic stroke, and was associated with fewer haemorrhagic events. Therefore, cilostazol could be used for prevention of stroke in patients with non-cardioembolic stroke.
Otsuka Pharmaceutical.
Journal Article
Failure of Collateral Blood Flow is Associated with Infarct Growth in Ischemic Stroke
by
Campbell, Bruce CV
,
Davis, Stephen M
,
Christensen, Søren
in
Aged
,
Brain Ischemia - drug therapy
,
Brain Ischemia - pathology
2013
Changes in collateral blood flow, which sustains brain viability distal to arterial occlusion, may impact infarct evolution but have not previously been demonstrated in humans. We correlated leptomeningeal collateral flow, assessed using novel perfusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) processing at baseline and 3 to 5 days, with simultaneous assessment of perfusion parameters. Perfusion raw data were averaged across three consecutive slices to increase leptomeningeal collateral vessel continuity after subtraction of baseline signal analogous to digital subtraction angiography. Changes in collateral quality, Tmax hypoperfusion severity, and infarct growth were assessed between baseline and days 3 to 5 perfusion-diffusion MRI. Acute MRI was analysed for 88 patients imaged 3 to 6 hours after ischemic stroke onset. Better collateral flow at baseline was associated with larger perfusion-diffusion mismatch (Spearman's Rho 0.51, P < 0.001) and smaller baseline diffusion lesion volume (Rho − 0.70, P < 0.001). In 30 patients without reperfusion at day 3 to 5, deterioration in collateral quality between baseline and subacute imaging was strongly associated with absolute (P = 0.02) and relative (P < 0.001) infarct growth. The deterioration in collateral grade correlated with increased mean Tmax hypoperfusion severity (Rho − 0.68, P < 0.001). Deterioration in Tmax hypoperfusion severity was also significantly associated with absolute (P = 0.003) and relative (P = 0.002) infarct growth. Collateral flow is dynamic and failure is associated with infarct growth.
Journal Article