Study on the Efficacy of Long-term Drainage of Subdural Effusion After Decompressive Craniectomy

NANot yet recruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

160

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

June 1, 2024

Primary Completion Date

June 1, 2026

Study Completion Date

December 31, 2027

Conditions
Traumatic Brain InjuryDecompressive CraniectomySubdural Effusion
Interventions
PROCEDURE

Long-term Drainage

After drilling or puncture, the drainage catheter is indwelling continuously and keeps to drainage for 7 days. Keep incision sterility, record the daily fluid drainage flow, and perform biochemical and bacterial culture identification tests for CSF regularly. Removing drainage catheter when the allocated time is reached. If there is still unabsorbed effusion after the allocated time is reached, the catheter placement time is extended and the relevant information is recorded.

PROCEDURE

Short-term Drainage

After drilling or puncture, the drainage catheter is indwelling continuously and keeps to drainage for 2 days. Keep incision sterility, record the daily fluid drainage flow, and perform biochemical and bacterial culture identification tests for CSF regularly. Removing drainage catheter when the allocated time is reached. If there is still unabsorbed effusion after the allocated time is reached, the catheter placement time is extended and the relevant information is recorded.

Trial Locations (1)

201114

Brain Injury Center, Renji Hospital, School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Zhujiang Hospital

OTHER

collaborator

Clinical Research Institute, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine

UNKNOWN

lead

RenJi Hospital

OTHER

NCT06391203 - Study on the Efficacy of Long-term Drainage of Subdural Effusion After Decompressive Craniectomy | Biotech Hunter | Biotech Hunter