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This research study will investigate a new method for identifying which patients should be offered blood thinners or therapies to reverse the underlying causes after stroke.
Atrial fibrillation(AF) is the primary risk factor for ischaemic stroke, increasing the risk by up to 5-fold. In AF, the upper heart chambers don't pump blood effectively into the lower chambers. When this happens, a blood clot can form, dislodge and leave the heart blocking an artery in the brain and cause a stroke. However, AF is often an intermittent condition and therefore difficult to diagnose. As such, there are a group of patients in whom no cause of their stroke can be identified.
In this study, we will recruit 92 patients from Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, Princess Royal University Hospital and King's College London.
As part of routine clinical care, patients undergo insertion of an Implantable Loop Recorder (CE Marked device), a minimally invasive procedure that allows accurate beat-to-beat monitoring to identify patients who develop intermittent AF post-stroke. We will request access to the data collected from this device and perform atrial MRI imaging in these patients to compare the findings between patients that do and do not have AF. If we show that atrial MRI scans are significantly different between patients with and without AF, we will use this information to support a trial of starting appropriate therapies (e.g. blood thinners) in these patients on the basis of MRI findings. This approach would have the advantage of enabling therapies to be offered to the right patients earlier and prevent repeat, potentially disabling stroke.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients will be recruited within 3 months of an acute ischaemic stroke. It must also be feasible to perform a cardiac MRI on all patients enrolled within 3 months of the acute ischaemic stroke.
Inclusion criteria includes patients with:
Exclusion criteria
92 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Irum D Kotadia, BSc MBBS
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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