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Active clinical trials for "Heart Arrest"

Results 421-430 of 769

Manual and Mechanical Chest Compression During In-hospital Witnessed Cardiac Arrests Using Cerebral...

Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation

Post-resuscitation neurological impairment is associated with morbidity and especially with late mortality. Thus, because good neurological outcome is vital for a successful resuscitation, it is essential to have sufficient cerebral tissue perfusion and oxygenation during its application. Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) is used to evaluate such conditions. NIRS is a non-invasive technique which provides real-time, continuous information about regional cerebral tissue oxygen saturation levels (regional SO2/rSO2). Research on NIRS has been done in many studies including cardiovascular surgery, neurosurgery and their intensive care processes and its effectiveness has been approved. However, there is limited data on its use in cardiac arrests. As stated in the current guidelines, sufficient speed and depth of chest compressions, few interruptions of compressions are key to a successful outcome of resuscitation. The studies with the mechanical chest compression devices showed that the earlier it was applied in out-of-hospital cases, the higher the rates of survival until hospitalization. There is not sufficient number of studies on the routine use of mechanical chest compression devices for in-hospital cases. In case the application of manual resuscitation is not convenient (during patient relocation, procedure at the angiography laboratory, and rush hours of emergency services when staff might fall short), alternative methods will be required. The aim of our study is to compare rSO2 levels measured during resuscitation with manual and mechanical devices in in-hospital (at the emergency department) witnessed cardiac arrest cases and to analyze the impact of both application method and perfusion levels on survival and neurological outcome.

Completed14 enrollment criteria

Ubiquinol as a Metabolic Resuscitator in Post-Cardiac Arrest

Cardiac Arrest

To study the effects of ubiquinol as a "metabolic resuscitator" in post-cardiac arrest.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Kneeling Posture With a Kneeling Stool During Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation in Hospital

Cardiac Arrest

To perform chest compression (CC) in the kneeling posture in hospital, we designed a stage with stairs, named the 'kneeling stool', on which a CC performer kneels beside a patient on a bed.This work is the validation study to demonstrate that the kneeling stool could be used for high quality hospital cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) with the kneeling posture. We hypothesized that the quality of chest compression with a kneeling posture using the kneeling stool is equal to or superior to CC with a standing posture using the height adjustment mechanism of the bed.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Improving the Quality of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) During Pediatric Cardiac Arrest

Cardiac Arrest

Our project aims to improve the delivery and assessment of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) during pediatric cardiac arrest by introducing 2 novel approaches: 1. We will evaluate the effectiveness of a novel, credit card sized, and highly affordable "nano-card" CPR visual feedback device to improve compliance with HSFC CPR guidelines when used during simulated pediatric cardiac arrest; 2. We will also develop and study a novel, "Just-in-Time" (JIT) CPR training video, integrating proven educational methods (video-based lecture, expert modeling, practice-while-watching), and use the CPR visual feedback device to provide real-time coaching. We hypothesize that: H1: The use of a CPR visual feedback device will improve compliance with current HSFC CPR and resuscitation guidelines during a simulated pediatric in-hospital cardiac arrest scenario compared with standard CPR with no visual feedback. H2: A JIT CPR Training Video, viewed by healthcare providers 2-4 weeks prior to the resuscitation event, will improve compliance with current HSFC CPR and resuscitation guidelines during simulated pediatric cardiac arrest compared with those healthcare providers with no prior exposure to the JIT CPR Training Video. H3: That there is poor correlation between providers' perception of CPR quality and actual measured CPR quality H4: That task load varies depending on provider role and type of clinical scenario

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Hospital Wearable Defibrillator Inpatient Study

In-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

This study will obtain device-human interaction evaluations for the HWD1000 within the controlled environment of the hospital as well as establish that the safety profile is similar to outpatient wearable cardioverter-defibrillators use.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

The ICU-Resuscitation Project (ICU-RESUS)

Cardiac Arrest

Pediatric cardiac arrest affects thousands of hospitalized children each year. High quality cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) saves lives, but is difficult to achieve. The objective of this study is to determine if a novel patient-centric resuscitation care improvement bundle consisting of bedside CPR training and multidisciplinary reviews of each cardiac arrest improves CPR quality and survival outcomes in a multi-center trial.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Neuromuscular Blockade for Post-Cardiac Arrest Care

Cardiac Arrest

The main purpose of this study is to evaluate if neuromuscular blockade improves lactate clearance (and preliminary secondary clinical outcome measures) as compared to usual care in post-cardiac arrest patients undergoing targeted temperature management.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Initiation of Cooling by EMS to Promote Adoption of In-hospital Hypothermia in Cardiac Arrest Survivors...

Out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest

This is a large pragmatic, randomized controlled trial comparing pre-hospital initiation of therapeutic hypothermia by Emergency Medical Services (EMS) providers to conventional post-resuscitation care. The goal of this trial is to increase the proportion of cardiac arrest patients that are appropriately treated in-hospital with therapeutic hypothermia to reach the target body temperature within 6 hours of hospital arrival. The investigators believe that EMS-initiation of cooling will be a powerful reminder to in-hospital clinicians to continue therapeutic hypothermia, and will lead to care improvements across a health system.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Effect of Ca2+ Ionophore on Embryonic Development and Clinical Outcome in Cases With Previous Fertilization...

Fertilization Arrest

We aimed to investigate the efficiency of chemical oocyte activation using readymade Ca2+ ionophore on cases with previously cancelled cases due to fertilization arrest at pronuclear stage i.e: cleavage failure to find out if there is any improvement in embryonic developmental stages.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Ischemic Conditioning in STEMI Patients

Cardiac Arrest

The purposes of the study are to 1) study alterations in the metabolomic profile of patients exposed to post-ischemic conditions and 2) study alterations in myocardial infarction size of patients exposed to post-ischemic conditioning.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria
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