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A patient, suffering from cortical blindness after a bi-occipital infarction 1 year earlier, regained near-normal vision in the right visual hemifield a few minutes after subcutaneous administration of mepivacaine. The effect was maintained for several days, and was repeated with each injection of mepivacaine. This clinical improvement is associated with functional changes in the peri-lesional areas on resting-state functional MRI.
The investigator team hypothesizes that in some patients with chronic neurological symptoms of stroke, the investigator team will observe a favorable response to subcutaneous mepivacaine injection.
Full description
A patient, suffering from cortical blindness after a bi-occipital infarction 1 year earlier, regained near-normal vision in the right visual hemifield a few minutes after subcutaneous administration of mepivacaine. The effect was maintained for several days, and was repeated with each injection of mepivacaine. This clinical improvement is associated with functional changes in the peri-lesional areas on resting-state functional MRI. The investigator team hypothesizes that in some patients with chronic neurological symptoms of stroke, investigator team will observe a favorable response to subcutaneous mepivacaine injection.
The team will include patients with clinically significant sequelae of ischemic stroke, as was the case with the initial patient. In addition,
The investigator teamwill therefore include patients with sequelae of at least one of the following three types:
Only patients more than 30 days after the occurrence of the stroke will be included. Indeed, the rapid recovery phase after a stroke lasts about 3 weeks and it is difficult to interpret rapid clinical changes and to attribute them to the treatment (since investigator team do not know the time of onset of the effect of mepivacaine) over this temporal period.
Mepivacaine will be administered as a single injection, subcutaneously, at a dose of 3 mL of mepivacaine hydrochloride (20 mg/mL), or 60mg. If mepivacaine is effective, research participants will experience a temporary reduction in neurological symptoms.
Time course of experiment
Signing of consent
Verification of inclusion and exclusion criteria (1h)
Blood sampling
Evaluation of the neurological deficit before treatment (1h)
MRI n°1 (duration 45 min to 1h)
Administration of mepivacaine 7 Evaluation of the neurological deficit after treatment, at T= 1+/- 30 minutes after administration (duration 1h)
8/ MRI n°2 (duration 30 to 45min) 1h30 after administration 9/ Evaluation of the neurological deficit after treatment, at T= 3h45+/- 45 minutes after administration (duration 1h)
Brain imaging
MRI will be performed on a SIEMENS 3 Tesla machine, without injection of contrast medium. The duration of the MRI will be approximately 45 minutes to one hour for MRI n°1 (baseline) and 30 to 45 minutes for MRI n°2 performed after the injection of mepivacaine.
MRI acquisitions will include the following sequences:
Drug treatment :
Mepivacaine will be administered:
Subcutaneously
In the shoulder on the non-dominant side, or on the non-deficient side in case of hemiplegia
Dose: 3 mL of mepivacaine hydrochloride (20 mg/mL), or 60mg
With at disposal
Genetic samples :
The gene coding for brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is of particular interest. BDNF is a protein that contributes to neurogenesis and neuronal differentiation, participates in the creation of new synapses and influences the survival of existing neurons. It is thus currently considered as a crucial element influencing brain plasticity . This could also be an explanatory factor in identifying responders to mepivacaine.
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38 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
COHEN Laurent, PUPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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