Overview

Efficacy and Safety of Young Health Plasma on Acute Stroke

Status:
Unknown status
Trial end date:
2017-10-01
Target enrollment:
0
Participant gender:
All
Summary
Stroke is one of the main severe disease of public health importance. Recent studies showed that old age is one of the most important factors in influencing the outcome of patients with acute stroke, and the young plasma can reverse age-related brain impairments in mice. Therefore, this pilot study aims to investigate whether young plasma is effective in alleviating brain injury and neurologic deficits induced by acute stroke in patients.
Phase:
Phase 2
Accepts Healthy Volunteers?
No
Details
Lead Sponsor:
Xinqiao Hospital of Chongqing
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

- Age 65-80 years

- Clinical presentation of spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage/ischemic stroke

- CT/MRI/MRA scan compatible with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage/ ischemic stroke

- Time to young plasma treatment < 72 h from symptom onset

- Glasgow Coma Score > 6 on initial presentation or improvement to a Glasgow Coma Score
> 6 within the time frame for enrollment

- The first-ever primary supratentorial intracerebral basal ganglia hemorrhage 5-30ml

- Signed and dated informed consent is obtained

- TOAST: Large-artery atherosclerosis

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients who will undergo surgical evacuation of intracerebral hemorrhage/ischemic
stroke

- Inability to undergo neuroimaging with Magnetic Resonance

- Glasgow Coma Score < 6

- Significant past history of disability, modified Rankin Scale(mRS)≥1

- Primary intraventricular hemorrhage ICH due to coagulopathy (PT > 15 s or
International Normalized Ratio > 1.3, Partial Thromboplastin Time > 36) or trauma

- Thrombocytopenia: platelet count <100 000

- Clinically significant hepatic disease as demonstrated by history, clinical exam
(ascites, varices), or laboratory findings (LFTs >2x normal, coagulopathy as
described)

- Comorbid conditions likely to complicate therapy including but not limited to the
following: a history of New York Heart Association class II, III, or IV Congestive
Heart Failure; end-stage acquired immune deficiency syndrome

- Known pregnancy, or positive pregnancy test, or breast feeding

- Malignancy (history of or active)

- Bradyarrhythmia and Atrioventricular Block

- Concomitant use with antineoplastic,immunosuppressive or immune modulating therapies

- Macular Edema

- Life expectancy of less than 90 days due to comorbid conditions

- Occurrences of secondary intracerebral hemorrhage/ischemic stroke

- Patients known or suspected of not being able to comply with the study protocol due to
alcoholism, drug dependency, noncompliance, living in another state or any other cause