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Minimally Invasive Soft Channel Brain Haemorrhage Evacuation for Acute Basal Ganglia Haemorrhage-- Large Hemorrhage Evacuation (MIRACLE-L)
Sponsor: Capital Medical University
Summary
To determine if minimally invasive soft channel brain hemorrhage evacuation (scMIS), compared with any other neurosurgical technique that includes open craniotomy, small skull window microsurgery , and endoscopic surgery, is at least as effective ('not inferior') on poor clinical outcome of death or major disability (mRS scores 4-6) at 6 months in basal ganglia intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) of 30 \< volume ≤ 100 ml.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 80 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
550
Start Date
2025-01-04
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2025-01-07
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Other neurosurgical techniques
Those include open craniotomy, small skull window microsurgery, and endoscopic surgery. The attending clinician is required to consider which type of craniotomy or other procedure according to the expertise and availability at the hospital.
Minimally Invasive Soft Channel Brain Haemorrhage Evacuation
This technique is based on the study of hematoma anatomy, cerebral vascular anatomy, and neural fiber structure anatomy in basal ganglia hemorrhage to determine the optimal surgical (catheter insertion) path. By applying stereogeometric principles, it allows for simple yet precise localization. Through surgical steps including puncture, aspiration, liquefaction (intermittent infusion of urokinase or alteplase), and external drainage, the hematoma can be completely removed in stages over a short period. This ensures that hematoma clearance and decompression of the brain occur simultaneously, achieving a minimally invasive intracerebral hemorrhage evacuation technique with a gradual reduction in intracranial pressure.
Locations (1)
Linyi People's Hospital
Linyi, Shandong, China