Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00987922

Mild Hypothermia in Acute Ischemic Stroke

Mild Hypothermia in Acute Ischemic Stroke After Thrombolytic Therapy: a Prospective,Open,Randomized,Single-center,Safety and Feasibility Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
36 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Helsinki · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Hypothesis: Mild hypothermia using non-invasive temperature management system in a stroke unit is safe and feasible in spontaneously breathing, alteplase-thrombolyzed patients with acute ischemic stroke.

Detailed description

Fever is associated with higher stroke mortality and poor outcome, but it is yet unknown whether this association is causative or epiphenomenal. In temporary brain ischemia rodent models hypothermia results in a significant increase in the number of surviving neurons and smaller infarction size as measured with histological examination after death. Therapeutic effect has been shown in clinical trials in comatose cardiac arrest patients and newborn infants with perinatal hypoxic-ischemic brain injury. Design: A prospective, open, randomized single-center study. Study population: 36 patients, 18-85 years of age presenting with symptoms of acute ischemic hemispheric stroke with persisting significant neurological deficit (NIHSS 7-20 or NIHSS 2 for dysphasia or NIHSS 3 for paralysis of upper or lower limb) at 2 hours after thrombolysis. Method: Patients are randomized to hypothermia- or control-group via randomization envelopes. Patients assigned to receive hypothermia are cooled to a core temperature of 35°C for 12 hours by means of a non-invasive temperature management system and cold i.v. fluids. Induction of hypothermia is initiated within 6 hours of symptom onset. After 12 hours of successful cooling the target temperature is gradually raised to achieve slow re-warming of 0.2°C/h until the core temperature reaches 36.8°C. Patients are breathing spontaneously and shivering is controlled with following medication; dexmedetomidine 0.2-0.7 µg/kg/h (i.v.), buspirone 5-20 mg x 3 (nasogastric tube), and meperidine 25mg (i.v.) when needed. Core temperature, blood pressure (BP), oxygen saturation, ECG and EEG are measured continuously and registered hourly. Blood tests will be taken before, during and after hypothermia. Brain CT will be controlled when normothermia is reached, no later than 30 hours from symptom onset. Brain MRI will be performed 3-7 days from symptom onset.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHypothermiaHypothermia to core temperature of 35C for 12 hours, rewarming rate 0.2C until the patient reaches 36.8C

Timeline

Start date
2007-07-01
Primary completion
2011-09-01
Completion
2011-09-01
First posted
2009-10-01
Last updated
2011-09-20

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00987922. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.