- ICH GCP
- Registr klinických studií v USA
- Klinická studie NCT00534157
Study of Eye Pressure as a Predictor of Intracranial Pressure in the Acutely Head-Injured Population
Intraocular Pressure as a Predictor of Intracranial Pressure in the Acutely Head-Injured Population
Přehled studie
Postavení
Podmínky
Detailní popis
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States, with an estimated 1.5 million American sustaining a TBI and 50,000 people dying from a TBI each year. While the immediate, or primary, injury causes significant damage, secondary injury is caused by cerebral edema, increased intracranial pressure, and resultant hypoperfusion and ischemia. Elevated intracranial pressure is strongly associated with poor recovery and death; failure to control intracranial pressure is likewise associated with poor outcomes and mortality.
Early detection of elevated ICP allows for the initiation of early therapy. However, patients with significant head injuries are often intubated for airway protection. The sedation required for intubation obscures the ED neurologic exam. Precise measurement of elevated ICP has required invasive monitoring via ventriculostomy. Yet this method is only provided at set institutions with neurosurgical services. Further there are distinct time delays between the trauma occurrence, transportation to a facility with neurosurgical services and placement of ventriculostomies. There is at the forefront, then, to establish non-invasive measures of ICP that are both time efficient and reliable.
Previous studies, including a pilot study conducted at this institution, showed a correlation between intraocular and intracranial pressure. However, this relationship has not been tested in an acute care trauma setting. We propose an observational cohort study of critically injured trauma patients with suspected closed head injury. Patients requiring intubation and mechanical ventilation pose a significant challenge to assess neurologically, as they are almost always sedated and often chemically paralyzed to facilitate airway management. Therefore, it is in this population of intubated trauma patients with suspected head injury that we will evaluate the use of tonometry to predict intracranial pressure from intraocular pressure.
Typ studie
Zápis (Aktuální)
Kontakty a umístění
Studijní místa
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Ohio
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Columbus, Ohio, Spojené státy, 43210
- The Ohio State University Medical Center
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Kritéria účasti
Kritéria způsobilosti
Věk způsobilý ke studiu
Přijímá zdravé dobrovolníky
Pohlaví způsobilá ke studiu
Popis
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients with suspected acute traumatic head injury
- Intubated prior to arrival in the Emergency Department or in the Emergency Department, including patients transferred from other facilities
Exclusion Criteria:
- Too unstable to allow the investigator access to the head of the bed to perform tonometry.
- Severe ocular or facial trauma such that an intact globe is not accessible
- Known history of glaucoma
- Penetrating head injury
- Patients that undergo operative decompression prior to the placement of an intracranial pressure monitor may be screened in the trauma bay and have an intraocular pressure obtained; however, these patients will not be included in the intraocular / intracranial pressure analysis.
- Known allergy to latex or tetracaine
Studijní plán
Jak je studie koncipována?
Detaily designu
Spolupracovníci a vyšetřovatelé
Sponzor
Vyšetřovatelé
- Vrchní vyšetřovatel: Brian C Hiestand, MD, The Ohio State University Department of Emergency Medicine
Termíny studijních záznamů
Hlavní termíny studia
Začátek studia
Dokončení studie (Aktuální)
Termíny zápisu do studia
První předloženo
První předloženo, které splnilo kritéria kontroly kvality
První zveřejněno (Odhad)
Aktualizace studijních záznamů
Poslední zveřejněná aktualizace (Odhad)
Odeslaná poslední aktualizace, která splnila kritéria kontroly kvality
Naposledy ověřeno
Více informací
Termíny související s touto studií
Klíčová slova
Další relevantní podmínky MeSH
Další identifikační čísla studie
- 2004H0126
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