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Showing 1-20 of 46 trials
NCT07412249
Remote ischemic conditioning (RIC) has emerged as a promising non-invasive strategy to protect the brain, with evidence suggesting its benefit in patients with carotid artery stenting (CAS). However, the long-term benefit and safety of chronic RIC in this population remain unknown. This trial aims to evaluate whether chronic RIC reduces the incidence of major vascular events and improves clinical outcomes in high-risk patients with carotid artery stenosis who received CAS.
NCT05845710
The PERFORMANCE III study is a prospective, multicenter single-arm, open label study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the Neuroguard IEP® Direct System for the treatment of carotid artery stenosis in subjects at elevated risk for carotid endarterectomy (CEA). Eligible patients greater than or equal to 20 years of age and less than or equal to 82 years of age, are those who have been diagnosed with either de-novo atherosclerotic or post CEA restenotic lesion(s) in the internal carotid arteries (ICA) or at the carotid bifurcation with greater than or equal to 50% stenosis if symptomatic or greater than or equal to 70% stenosis if asymptomatic.
NCT07057297
This prospective, multicenter observational study aims to evaluate the incidence, timing, and characteristics of residual and recurrent (restenosis) carotid artery stenosis following carotid endarterectomy (CEA) with primary closure. Conducted across several neurosurgical centers in the Czech Republic, the study will include patients undergoing elective CEA who meet standard clinical indications. Participants will undergo preoperative CT angiography and follow-up imaging at 30 days and 1 year post-surgery. Residual stenosis is defined as ≥50% luminal narrowing detected within 30 days postoperatively, while restenosis is evaluated at later time points. The study will also assess clinical outcomes such as ischemic stroke, TIA, myocardial infarction, and mortality. The standardized surgical technique and harmonized diagnostic algorithm across all centers aim to provide robust data on the performance and durability of primary closure CEA.
NCT06986330
OCT techniques have been used in the assessment of both intracranial and extracranial lesions.(1) Preprocedural evaluation: The morphologic characteristics of carotid atherosclerotic plaques can be evaluated by OCT before surgery to identify vulnerable plaques and guide interventional therapy. It has been shown that plaque image features observed by OCT and based on the "thin fibrous cap" characteristics of plaques can predict rupture and thrombotic risk of atherosclerotic plaques. Similarly, the results of studies based on OCT plaque features suggest that OCT plaque features can be used for the identification of symptomatic carotid plaques.The results of studies based on OCT plaque characteristics suggest that OCT plaque characteristics correlate with the degree of carotid stenosis and ischemic symptoms. Therefore, it is important to use OCT to assess plaque characteristics prior to cerebrovascular interventions and to identify high-risk plaques that are prone to cause ischemic events, in order to guide carotid interventions, especially for patients whose stenosis has not reached the level of intervention, but who have not yet reached the level of ischemic events, or who are at risk of ischemic events.lesions with stenosis not reaching the level of intervention but with the presence of vulnerable plaques are of great significance.(2) Evaluation of immediate post-interventional outcomes: Currently, OCT has been used to evaluate the expansion rate of the relevant stent immediately after stenting, stent adherence, protrusion of diseased tissue into the lumen of the vessel, and in-stent thrombosis.In addition, in acute occlusion recanalization of intracranial vessels, the application of OCT can identify the nature of lesions during treatment, such as clips, atherosclerotic stenosis, and other lesions, and guide the development of surgical strategies. (3) Interventional follow-up: OCT can be used in post-interventional follow-up for post-stenting endothelial repair, in-stent restenosis, de novo atherosclerosis, and thrombus formation. In summary, OCT can accurately assess the nature of cerebrovascular lesions and plaques and guide clinical interventions.For medical centers that have the conditions, it is recommended to standardize the application of OCT to guide the interventional precision treatment of ischemic cerebrovascular disease.In the future, a clinical study database of OCT in Chinese patients with ischemic cerebrovascular disease should be established to provide evidence-based medical evidence of OCT in the diagnosis and treatment
NCT06882954
Carotid stenosis are asymptomatic if no hemispheric or retinal symptoms have appeared in the 6 months preceding the discovery of the stenosis. Asymptomatic carotid stenosis (ACS) accounts for about ¾ of all carotid lesions. The goal of treating carotid stenosis is to prevent a stroke. While carotid surgery is recommended in the elderly patients in cases of symptomatic carotid stenosis, that of ACS in patients over 75 years old, even when tight, remains subject to many controversies. Indeed, the debate, concerning the benefit to be expected from a surgical procedure or a possible angioplasty procedure, is not yet closed. The aim of our study, through a retrospective evaluation of the results of all consecutive carotid endarterectomy (CEA) and stenting in the participating center.
NCT04063709
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability in the United States and around the world. The goal of this work is to develop and test a noninvasive ultrasound-based imaging technology to better identify patients at high risk of stroke so that appropriate and timely intervention may be administered to prevent it.
NCT06511089
Rationale: Approximately 20% of the patients with acute ischemic stroke due to an intracranial large vessel occlusion (LVO) has a high-grade stenosis in the ipsilateral cervical carotid artery. It is uncertain whether immediate carotid artery stenting (CAS) of a cervical carotid artery stenosis during endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) is beneficial. Immediate CAS could improve cerebral perfusion and prevent recurrent ischemic stroke but could also increase the chance of intracranial hemorrhagic complications due to hyperperfusion syndrome or to the required antiplatelet treatment to prevent stent occlusion. Moreover, some patients end up with a severe disabling stroke after EVT. In these patients carotid revascularization by carotid endarterectomy (CEA) or CAS would usually not be performed but these patients would be treated by medical management only. Objective: to assess the safety and efficacy of immediate cervical CAS during EVT in patients with acute ischemic stroke due to LVO with a high-grade stenosis \>50% or occlusion of the ipsilateral cervical carotid artery. Study design: prospective randomized open label controlled trial comparing immediate CAS during EVT versus EVT with deferred treatment of the cervical carotid artery lesion (deferred CAS/CEA or medical management alone). Outcome assessment will be blinded for treatment allocation.
NCT05980195
The purpose of CARE-HBOT study is to evaluate whether patients with symptomatic severe carotid artery stenosis with cognitive impairment who underwent hyperbaric oxygen therapy plus standard medical treatment after stent implantation could improve their cognitive function compared with those who underwent standard postoperative medical treatment.
NCT04470687
Stroke is the second leading cause of death in the Western world and the leading cause of major lifelong disability. About 15% of strokes are secondary to thrombosis or embolization of an unstable atheromatous carotid plaque. In these symptomatic patients, the degree of carotid stenosis is correlated with the risk of early recurrence. Patients with stenosis over 70% are therefore offered an endarterectomy, an operation to remove carotid plaque, to prevent future strokes\[1\]. In asymptomatic patients, the degree of stenosis is a limited predictor, and better risk stratification is required to assess the degree of plaque vulnerability and stroke risk of the patient. The therapeutic decision towards endarterectomy in addition to drug therapy is debated because of a variable and dependent benefit/risk balance for each patient. A number of imaging parameters have been studied: ulceration, heterogeneity, vascularization of the plaque for example, but their place is not well defined \[2\]. The usual evaluation of carotid stenosis is by conventional Doppler ultrasound with calculation of the degree of stenosis according to the NASCET criteria. For symptomatic stenoses the intervention is recommended when above 70% and is discussed from 50% to 70% of NASCET stenosis degree. For asymptomatic stenoses, the procedure is discussed when above 60% taking into account the patient's life expectancy, the risk of the surgery and the unstable nature of the plaque \[2\]. Destabilization of the carotid plaque is partially induced by inflammation associated with neo-vascularization. The detection of these new vessels by conventional contrast ultrasound has already shown a distinction between stable and unstable plaques, by the presence or absence of microbubbles in the plaque. However, this assessment is not very precise and only the most vascularized plaques can be detected. Ultrafast ultrasound Imaging is a new ultrasonic Imaging modality that allows detecting low speed flows, a tiny vascular structure within the vessel wall. RESEARCH HYPOTHESIS Plaques neo-vascularization would be more precisely detected and characterized by ultrafast imaging coupled with microbubble injection than conventional ultrasound imaging. A better assessment of plaque instability could improve the selection of patients for carotid endarterectomy and increase the benefit/risk ratio of this preventive surgery.
NCT06485102
This research will focus on the differences of the postoperative outcome for carotid surgery patients treated by either male or female surgeons. Since 2012, in Germany, the surgical treatment of carotid stenosis has an established quality assurance, making the thematic especially suitable for testing the surgical results of either male or female surgeons.
NCT06315153
This observational study was designed for the assessment of plaque vulnerability in patients with carotid atherosclerotic stenosis and the development of predictive models for the occurrence and recurrence of atherosclerotic ischemic stroke. The objectives of the study were as follows: first, to integrate the degree of carotid stenosis and plaque characteristics assessed by vascular ultrasound for a comprehensive assessment of plaque vulnerability; second, to develop an assessment tool for the risk of future ischemic stroke in patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis by combining vascular risk factors, serologic markers, carotid ultrasound characteristics, and contrast-enhanced ultrasonographic parameters; and third, to incorporate vascular ultrasound parameters into existing predictive models of ischemic stroke recurrence risk to develop a risk assessment tool for atherosclerotic ischemic stroke. The main questions it aims to answer are: * How to screen high-risk patients and those eligible for revascularization from asymptomatic carotid stenosis patients for primary prevention of stroke. * How to improve the prediction accuracy of atherosclerotic ischemic stroke based on existing prediction models for secondary prevention of stroke.
NCT06294496
Ischemic stroke affects 2.5 to 3 million people annually in China, ranking as the leading cause of death and disability. Cervical artery stenosis is a significant contributor to this problem, with about 50% of patients experiencing cognitive impairment due to reduced cerebral blood flow. Two main surgical approaches, carotid endarterectomy (CEA) and carotid artery stenting (CAS), are used to treat severe cervical artery stenosis, but their effects on various factors remain unclear. This project collects multimodal imaging data, including CT perfusion and angiography, to create 3D models of cervical artery stenosis. Computational fluid dynamics and AI analysis are used to assess hemodynamics. By monitoring blood flow, oxygen levels, and evaluating postoperative outcomes, the goal is to tailor surgical approaches for better patient outcomes and improved quality of life.
NCT04758650
Phase II study to evaluate the clinical potential of 68GaNOTA-anti-MMR-VHH2 for in vivo imaging of Macrophage Mannose Receptor (MMR)-expressing Macrophages by means of Positron Emission Tomography (PET) in patients with oncological lesions in need of non-surgical therapy, patients with cardiovascular atherosclerosis, syndrome with abnormal immune activation and sarcoïdosis.
NCT01569594
Assess device performance data from subjects undergoing patch angioplasty of the carotid artery following carotid endarterectomy using the CorMatrix ECM for Carotid Repair.
NCT05829200
Carotid Disease causes 10% of strokes. The Investigators are attempting to investigate the use of Transcranial Doppler to see if this is and effective, efficient, and/or valid way to identify individuals at highest risk for thromboembolic events from carotid disease. The plan is to plot the number of high intensity transient transcranial doppler signals with the category of patient (asymptomatic, symptomatic, and actively symptomatic) and evaluate if a relationship exists. The Investigators hypothesize that a linear relationship exists in that the higher the number of HITS the more symptomatic the patient. If results demonstrate the numbers of HITS correlate with the severity of disease this could potentially identify asymptomatic patients having subclinical symptoms who would benefit from a more urgent surgical intervention versus the current standard of care of elective intervention.
NCT05652426
In this study, we investigated the effect of the capacity to cope with oxidative stress (oxidative stress response during and after clamping) in individuals with cerebral oximetry level between 40- 60 % and above 60 % and their effect on cognitive functions. Methods: In this retrospective study, patients who were scheduled for carotid endarterectomy, examined the MOCA tests before and after the operation and collected blood samples intraoperatively were included between January 2020-2021. The time periods specified below, blood samples were taken and serums were frozen at -80 celcius all this patients. Montreal cognitive function assessment test was applied before the operation, 24 hours and 7 days after the operation. Ten mililiters venous blood samples were collected to examine the status of basal neuron specific enolase, S100B, oxydative stress parameters (HAF-1 and DAF-1) at time intervals. Time intervals as follow: T1: Peripheral baseline measurements (blood will be taken from arterial blood sampling) + Cerebral Oxymeter levels + Montreal cognitive performance test + Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) T2: 1 minute before clamping (from peripheral and jugular vena blood sampling) + Cerebral Oxymeter levels T3: Before opening clamp(from peripheral and jugular vena blood sampling) + Cerebral Oxymeter levels T4: 24 hours after the procedure. (peripheral blood sampling) + Montreal cognitive performance test T5: 7 days after the operation. (peripheral blood sampling) + Montreal cognitive performance test + CO levels+ Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) Results: We found significantly positive corelation between cerebral oxymeter levels, oxydative stress parameters and cognitive performance tests in this six patient.
NCT04835571
In the entire world most people die from cardiovascular disease. Death is primarily from myocardial infarction (MI) and stroke which are most often caused by rupture of atherosclerotic plaques. Patients with high-grade, i.e. ≥ 70% carotid artery stenosis are at especially high risk. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) studies show that two features inside plaques that are associated with the risk of plaque rupture and subsequent cardiovascular events are: lipid rich necrotic core (LRNC) and intraplaque hemorrhage (IPH). MRI studies on carotid artery plaques typically relies on proton-density-weighted fast-spin echo, blood-suppressed T1- and T2-weighted gradient-echo sequences. The end-result is nonquantitative measures, where plaque features are identified due to their relative signal intensity. To address these problems of non-specificity, we developed a quantitative MRI (qMRI) technique based on Dixon sequences. The study intention is to enable in-depth analysis of plaque features and their relation to clinical data. For example there is an insufficient understanding of associations between lipid biomarkers and plaque contents. Our hypothesis is that we can identify quantitative changes in both plaque and lipid biomarkers after one year of optimized cardiovascular risk management (including treatment with lipid lowering drugs), and establish if there is any associations between these features. Because there is a well-established link between systemic inflammation and the presence of atherosclerotic plaques we will also study the relationship between LRNC and IPH as measured by qMRI versus circulating markers of inflammation. Method: Patients with known carotid stenosis are invited for a baseline visit and a 1-year follow up visit. The study visits include clinical assessment, blood tests, patient interview and magnetic resonance imaging of the carotid arteries. All participants are offered optimized cardiovascular risk management through the individual assessment by the study physicians.
NCT05355259
The objective of this clinical investigation is to evaluate the safety and technical success of the Basecamp Vascular controllable directional GECKO guidewire when used to facilitate endovascular access to the targeted vessel in order to treat the vascular lesion.
NCT03488199
That the study will be carried out as it has the protocol instructions, respecting the applicable regulations for clinical investigations with medical devices and following the internationally accepted ethical standards
NCT01053065
The impact on cardiovascular events achieved by statin therapy seems to be mostly attributable to the cholesterol-lowering effect with a highly debated contribution of the lipid-independent pleiotropic effects. However, a short-term benefit has been documented for patients treated with statins in acute coronary syndromes and other clinical settings. These observations strengthened the hypothesis of additional, so-called pleiotropic actions of statins. The investigators therefore sought to investigate how different lipid-lowering strategies (non-statin therapy, low-dose statin and high-dose statin) affects cellular composition of carotid plaque over a short-term period of three months. Specifically the investigators tried and dissect the LDL-C lowering impact on plaque cellular composition as compared to the lipid-independent contribution on plaque macrophage and smooth muscle cells.