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Active clinical trials for "Acute Kidney Injury"

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The Effect of Ulistin on Acute Renal Injury in Patients Undergoing OPCAB (Off Pump Coronary Artery...

Acute Kidney Injury

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication after cardiac surgery. AKI has been reported as 7-40% depending on the type of surgery, and is known to increase to about 50% when there are risk factors. Cardiac surgery-associated AKI (CSA-AKI) requires cardiac replacement therapy in 1-5% of patients and increases mortality to 1,4%, but the treatment is still unknown. Therefore prevention of occurrence is very important. Known factors related to the development of CSA-AKI include hemodynamic, inflammatory, metabolic, and nephrotoxic factors, and since there is a close connection between hypotension due to deterioration of cardiac function, preventive measures to prevent hypotension in juicing It is only possible. To date, strategies to protect kidneys with drugs are very limited. Urinary trypsin inhibitor, ulistine, has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects, so it has been reported to protect against renal ischemia/reperfusion injury. Various studies have been attempted to prevent CSA-AKI, but most of them are inflammatory reactions during surgery. It was performed only for surgery with extracorporeal circulation that causes severely. Therefore, this study would like to verify the effectiveness of ulistine's medicine in the prevention of CSA-AKI in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery without extracorporeal circulation.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Nafamostat Efficacy and Safety in Critically Ill Patients(NICE)

Acute Kidney Injury

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common and serious problem in critically ill patients, and is known to be an independent risk factor for mortality. Renal replacement therapy (RRT) is the mainstay of supportive treatment of patients with severe acute kidney injury. The goal of RRT is to achieve adequate correction of uremia, electrolyte abnormalities, and volume overload while ensuring good hemodynamic tolerance. The advantages of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) are increased time-averaged dialysis dose, less hemodynamic instability, and possibly, removal of high molecular weight solutes, such as inflammatory cytokines. Solute removal can occur by several different mechanisms in CRRT. For relatively small solutes, the importance of diffusion and convection is emphasized, for solutes of larger molecular weight, the importance of convection and adsorption is emphasized. The ability of a specific CRRT to remove a certain solute is determined by membrane characteristics. But actual measurements of middle molecule clearance in large clinical trials have not been available in most trials. During CRRT, blood is conducted through an extracorporeal circuit, circuit clotting is a major problem in daily practice of CRRT, increasing blood loss, workload, and costs. Early clotting is related to bioincompatibility, critical illness, vascular access, CRRT circuit, and modality. Therefore, one major intervention to influence circuit survival is anticoagulation. However, systemic anticoagulation, usually with heparin, can produce hemorrhagic complications in patients at high risk of bleeding. To minimize the risk of bleeding, a number of alternative regimens has been proposed, however, each of those methods has its own limitations and complication. Nafamostat mesilate, a serine proteinase inhibitor, while inhibiting various clotting factors in filter circuit, is characterized by short half life resulting in little systemic anticoagulation effect. A recently developed CRRT AN69ST membrane® (Gambro Inc) is coated with a polyethylene imine (PEI, cationic biopolymer) on the membrane surface. Once adsorbed onto the membrane, heparin keeps its anticoagulant properties. Therefore CRRT has been managed without systemic administration of heparin. The investigators will conduct a multicenter prospective randomized controlled open-label trial which compares the difference in circuit survival between between nafamostat infusion and heparinized saline priming as anticoagulation for CRRT. The primary end-point of this study is circuit survival, the time of 1st membrane exchange. The secondary end-point is clearance of small molecule (urea) and middle molecule (β2 microglobulin) at 0, 1, 6, 24h, ACT(activated coagulation time) measurements after 1hr of the CRRT, Hemorrhagic complication. This is a noninferiority trial. The aim is to demonstrate that nafamostat infusion is not inferior to the heparinized saline priming. For this purpose, at least 80 subjects (a total of 160) would be required for each group if type I error rate is 5% and type II error is 20% given 20% of drop-out rate during the study period. Block randomization will be used by means of a dedicated website. There are still conflicting data on the effective exchange time of circuit membrane. Our study may help to improve prognosis in patients with severe AKI.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Safety of Iodinated Contrast in Liver Transplant Candidates With Decreased Renal Function Undergoing...

Acute Kidney InjuryRenal Insufficiency4 more

This study evaluates the safety of iodinated contrast medium administered to liver transplant candidates with decreased renal function undergoing coronary CT angiography. Incidence of post-contrast acute kidney injury in liver transplant candidates with decreased renal function and normal renal function will be compared.

Withdrawn5 enrollment criteria

Collective Accuryn Physiologic Signals and Signatures

Critical IllnessAcute Kidney Injury3 more

The CAPSS Study is a retrospective and prospective, multi-center, single-arm post-market data collection study with an FDA cleared device. Physiologic data measurements will be collected from enrolled subjects using electronic health records and data streams via the Accuryn Monitoring System. Analysis of these data has the potential to be able to acutely guide resuscitation and monitor trends for emerging critical conditions.

Withdrawn3 enrollment criteria

Acute Kidney Injury in Neonates

Acute Kidney Injury

Our first aim is to describe how common a sudden decrease in renal function happens in infants in a neonatal intensive care unit. We also want to see how a sudden loss of renal function affects survival. Finally, we will explore non-invasive markers to identify a sudden decrease in renal function from urinary samples.

Withdrawn2 enrollment criteria

Hemodynamic Effects Of Impella On Renal Circulation And Risk Of CA-AKI Among Patients Undergoing...

Contrast-induced Acute Kidney Injury (CI-AKI)

Patients undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) are exposed to the risk of suffering from a damage to the kidneys which goes under the name of Contrast-Associated Acute Kidney Injury (CA-AKI), which is more common if the subject has advanced heart or kidney disease. Up to 1 high risk patient in 3 can suffer from CA-AKI. Impella is a pump which sustain the heart in the course of PCI in high risk individuals. Incidentally, Impella was shown to also reduce the incidence of CA-AKI. The reason why Impella protects the kidneys is not currently known. The investigators aim at understanding it through measurements of kidney blood flow and metabolism.

Withdrawn19 enrollment criteria

Computer-based Dosage Calculation for Antibiotics

Acute Kidney InsufficiencyAnti-Infective Agent Toxicity

Adequate dosing of antiinfective therapy in critically ill patients with impaired or lost renal function or continuous renal replacement therapy is nearly impossible without measuring the drug concentration in blood samples. In many hospitals that is still not an option. The investigators aim to show, that computer based calculation can avoid over- or under-dosing.

Withdrawn5 enrollment criteria

Assessing the Impact of Two Methods of Continuous Veno-venous Hemodiafiltration on Time Nursing...

Acute Renal Failure

The prevalence of acute renal failure in intensive care is estimated at between 5 and 20% depending on diagnostic criteria retained. And half of patients require the use of hemodialysis. Continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration (CVVHDF) is one of the hemodialysis technique widely used in intensive care unit. The CVVHDF is performed at the bedside, by a mobile generator with a semi permeable membrane, a blood circuit, a dialysate circuit and a feedback circuit. The implementation of a CVVHDF requires the use of large amounts of biological liquid essential to enable the purification of blood during its passage through the artificial kidney. The objective of this study is to assess time nursing work and the costs of each method.

Withdrawn3 enrollment criteria

AV Fistula Salvage in Advanced CKD Using Sodium Bicarbonate Prophylaxis

Acute Renal Failure

This is an observational study assessing the impact of conventional dose iodinated contrast on the renal function of advanced chronic kidney disease patients undergoing arteriovenous fistula evaluation using a standard sodium bicarbonate prophylaxis protocol. In addition, this model allows for pre and post procedure measurements of kidney function, providing a unique opportunity to assess the utility of novel biomarkers for contrast-induced kidney injury. Our primary hypothesis is that there will be no change in serum creatinine post-procedure when using a standard sodium bicarbonate prophylaxis protocol. Our secondary hypothesis is that there will be no change in urinary kidney-injury marker-1 (KIM-1) post-procedure using a standard sodium bicarbonate prophylaxis protocol. In addition, we will assess the impact of different patient characteristics on the development of contrast-induced kidney injury, such as diabetes, coronary artery disease, hypertension, and angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor therapy.

Withdrawn9 enrollment criteria

Effect of Cumulative Chloride Dose on Development of Acute Kidney Injury in Critically Ill Children...

Acute Kidney Injury

The investigators would like to investigate the effect of chloride dosing on the development of acute kidney injury in critically ill patients. The investigators hypothesis is that administering intravenous fluids with higher chloride content are more likely to lead to acute kidney injury.

Withdrawn5 enrollment criteria
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