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Interest of Real Time Measurement of Autonomous Nervous System for the Detection of Brain Death (MEANS)

C

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Traumatic Brain Hemorrhage
Traumatic Brain Injury
Cerebral Hematoma, Traumatic
Intracerebral Hemorrhage, Traumatic

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00918970
CNIL 908.476
0708045

Details and patient eligibility

About

Context: A major lack of organ donors is a serious public health problem. It determines a prolonged delay before a transplant can be performed and thus a significant number of deaths of patients waiting for transplantation. The aim of this project is to reduce the delay of the diagnosis of brain death, and also to improve its diagnosis in the Intensive Care Unit.

The diagnosis of brain death is strictly defined by the law and relies either on two consecutive flat electroencephalograms recorded at an interval of four hours, or on the lack of cerebral circulation during a brain angiography performed after suspecting brain death on the clinical exam. However, in usual practice, it is difficult to have all the needed clinical arguments, and their interpretation can be difficult in the pathological context. This may participate in the delay and the lack of patients potentially donors.

Pre-study: In a pilot study, fifty subjects with severe cerebral lesions, had a continuous ECG recording. The investigators could find that a decrease in autonomic nervous system activity, as measured through the ECG, was correlated to the transition to brain death assessed by cerebral angiography. The loss of cardiac variability was always observed between two cerebral angiographies, one before and the second after brain death. This study allowed the investigators to calculate the threshold values of sympathetic and parasympathetic activities to confirm brain death.

Full description

Aim: The aim of this second study is to validate prospectively the interest of the analysis in real-time of autonomic nervous system activity to detect brain death.

Benefits expected: Increase the number of organ donors and the number of organs removal available for transplantation.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • severe cerebral lesions
  • admitted in intensive care units

Exclusion criteria

  • neoplastic pathology
  • prior myocardiac infarction
  • hearth failure
  • atrial fibrillation
  • insulin-treated diabetes mellitus
  • cardiac pacemaker

Trial design

30 participants in 2 patient groups

SNA group
Description:
This group will have a real-time analysis of autonomic nervous system activity during its intensive care hospitalisation
Clinical group
Description:
This group will have a conventional clinical analysis during its intensive care hospitalisation

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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