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A Multidisciplinary Translational Approach to Investigate the Mechanisms, Predictors, and Prevention of Persistent Post-Traumatic Headache
Rochester, Minn.,
Jacksonville, Fla.,
Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz.
The purpose of this study is to identify mechanisms and predictors for the persistence of post-traumatic headache and methods to treat post-traumatic headache and prevent its persistence.
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A Multidisciplinary Translational Approach to Investigate the Mechanisms, Predictors, and Prevention of Persistent Post-Traumatic Headache - Human Studies Protocol: Individual Projects Excluding Clinical Trial
Rochester, Minn.,
Jacksonville, Fla.,
Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz.
The purpose of this study is to identify mechanisms and predictors for the persistence of post-traumatic headache and methods to treat post-traumatic headache and prevent its persistence. This study will address individual projects not covered by IRB 19-003200 and is done at the request of the DOD.
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Comparison of Anti-coagulation and Anti-Platelet Therapies for Intracranial Vascular Atherostenosis (CAPTIVA) (CAPTIVA)
Jacksonville, Fla.
The primary goal of the trial is to determine if the experimental arms (rivaroxaban or ticagrelor or both) are superior to the clopidogrel arm for lowering the 1-year rate of ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, or vascular death.
Closed for Enrollment
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Endovascular Arterial Reperfusion vs. Intravenous ThromboLYsis for Acute Ischemic Stroke (EARLY): A Randomized Pilot Study of Ultra-early (<2 Hours) and Early (2-4.5 Hours) Reperfusion Therapy
Jacksonville, Fla.
This pilot trial will be the first step toward direct comparison of delivery of endovascular reperfusion therapy to intravenous rt-PA in a time-to-treatment framework shown as most effective by the NINDS rt-PA Stroke Trial. A randomized trial is justified for the following reasons: 1) The high rate of death and disability associated with ischemic stroke despite treatment with intravenous rt-PA mandates critical analysis of alternate therapies with therapeutic potential, 2) endovascular treatment for acute ischemic stroke is expanding in North America without compelling evidence of safety and efficacy from well-designed clinical trials, 3) critical cost-effectiveness analysis cannot be done without acquiring pertinent outcomes data from controlled studies.
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Stroke Hyperglycemia Insulin Network Effort (SHINE) Trial (SHINE)
Jacksonville, Fla.
The Stroke Hyperglycemia Insulin Network Effort (SHINE) Trial is a multicenter, randomized, controlled clinical trial of 1400 patients that will include approximately 60 enrolling sites. The study hypotheses are that treatment of hyperglycemic acute ischemic stroke patients with targeted glucose concentration (80mg/dL - 130 mg/dL) will be safe and result in improved 3 month outcome after stroke. Eligible subjects must be within 12 hours of stroke symptom onset and have diabetes and glucose concentrations of over 110 mg/dL on initial evaluation. The enrolling sites will include the Neurological Emergencies Treatment Trials (NETT) sites as well as non NETT sites from all over the United States. The study will evaluate the safety and efficacy of targeted glucose control (treatment group - IV insulin with target 80-130 mg/dl) verses control therapy of sub q insulin plus basal insulin with target glucose less than 180 mg/ dL. The primary outcome will be functional outcome at 3 months as measured by the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) Score. The primary safety outcome will be severe hypoglycemia defined as <40 mg/dL. Enrollment will occur over 3.5 - 4 years.
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