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Active clinical trials for "Death"

Results 251-260 of 497

Trial to Define the Benefits and Harms of Deceased Donor Kidney Procurement Biopsies

Kidney TransplantRenal Transplant

The purpose of this research study is to compare the impact of the availability of biopsy results at the time of organ offers on the use and outcomes of kidneys from deceased donors.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Heart Rate Response to Regadenoson and Sudden Cardiac Death

Left Ventricular Systolic DysfunctionSudden Cardiac Death

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a blunted heart rate response to regadenoson is an independent predictor of sudden cardiac death.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Nicorandil Study to Reduce Cardiac Death After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) in Hemodialysis...

Acute Myocardial InfarctionCongestive Heart Failure

Survival after invasive coronary revascularization is worse in patients with chronic kidney disease than in those without it. The investigators aimed to examine whether oral administration of nicorandil, a hybrid of nitrate and adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel opener, could improve the survival of end-stage renal disease patients with coronary artery disease by inhibiting cardiac death after coronary revascularization.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Intravenous n-3 Fatty Acids and Sudden Cardiac Death in Hemodialysis Patients

Renal FailureChronic

The main purpose of this study is to investigate whether intravenous infusion of a lipid emulsion with a high content of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids can improve heart rate variability and ventricular repolarization and reduce ventricular arrhythmias in hemodialysis patients.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Liver Grafts With FibroScan® Before Organ Retrieval in Patients With Brain Death

Tissue and Organ HarvestingLiver Transplantation1 more

According to the French Biomedicine Agency annual report on retrieval activities and transplants, 1,164 liver transplants were performed in 2011 and 1,161 in 2012. If the amount of brain death donors and retrieved liver grafts appears relatively stable, it remains clearly insufficient compared to the increasing number of patients on the waiting list for liver transplantation (2,462 in 2011). The median time on the waiting list before liver transplantation which was established from the cohort of patients registered between 2007 and 2011 (excluding patients registered for emergency transplantation and for living related-donor transplantation) increased significantly from 4.4 months between 2007 and 2009 to 6.6 months between 2010 and 2011. In order to compensate for the lack of liver grafts, donors acceptance criteria were broadened. For example, alternative transplantation lists were created with liver grafts coming from so-called "marginal" donors. However, despite these efforts, livers were retrieved on only two out of three brain death donors, i.e. in 1,572 and 1,589 organ donors in 2011 and 2012, respectively. This is unfortunately not enough to meet the increasing needs in liver grafts and a growing number of patients wait each year for transplant. Strategic lines of improvement were defined in order to meet the "2012-2016 transplant perspective" which targets 5,700 transplants carried out in 2015 (+5% every year, all transplants included, with 5,023 transplants in 2012). According to the last consensus conference on liver transplantation of the HAS (French High Authority of Health) the assessment of the degree of macrovacuolar and microvacuolar steatosis determines the possibility to retrieve the graft or not. Liver steatosis consists in an accumulation of fatty droplets in hepatocytes. Its prevalence is high, ranging from 16% to 31% in the general population, and increases up to 46% in heavy drinkers and to 50-80% in the obese population. Steatosis results mostly from alcohol consumption and from metabolic syndrome (obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertriglyceridemia) called non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and is more rarely secondary to viral hepatitis or exposure to certain medications. NAFLD involves up to 30% of the population in Western countries and its prevalence is increasing. NAFLD may lead to asymptomatic steatosis, but also to steatohepatitis or advanced fibrosis including cirrhosis and its complications Accordingly, the improvement of liver grafts selection based on objective quantitative criteria which takes into account the degree of liver steatosis appears crucial to increase the number of hepatic transplants.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Therapeutic Hypothermia on Deceased Donor Renal Graft Outcomes - a Randomized Controlled...

Deceased Organ DonorMild Hypothermia1 more

To protect kidney function during the transplantation process by inducing mild hypothermia in the deceased organ donor before organs are recovered

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Guiding ICU Physicians' Communication and Behavior Towards Bereaved Relatives

Patients Died in Intensive Care Unit (ICU)

As ICU mortality is high, end-of-life is a subject of major concern for intensivists. With a mortality rate of 20%, end-of-life care has become a daily responsibility. Among those deaths, 60 to 80% follow a decision to withhold or withdraw treatment, situations where physicians, nurses and relatives must work together towards the most consensual decision. In this context, patients' relatives feel vulnerable and, in the months that follow the death, they are most likely to present symptoms that negatively affect their quality of life (anxiety, depression, PTSD, prolonged grief). Many studies have shown that communication with caregivers is one of the most highly valued aspects of care that impacts on family members' experience during the patient's stay and after the patient's death. Improving communication during the end-of-life process in the ICU context is a necessity that has been put forward in palliative care and family-centered care guidelines. This study aims to improve both communication skills and behaviour by giving precise recommendations to physicians (3 step strategy) in their direct contact with patients' relatives. A 3-step physician-driven support strategy is used, that consists in 3 meetings with the relative - one before, one during and one after the patient's death. The underlying hypothesis is that this strategy will improve communication in the end-of-life setting and thus should reduce post-ICU burden for family members, specifically the development of prolonged grief 6 months after the death.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Incentives for Postnatal Care Demand

Maternal DeathNeonatal Death

The purpose of this study is to identify the causal impact of performance-based monetary incentives in increasing postnatal care (PNC) referrals by traditional birth attendants (TBAs), via a randomized controlled trial (RCT).

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Impact of N-Acetylcysteine on Oxidative Stress and Renal Function in Deceased Kidney Transplant...

Deceased Kidney Transplantation

The aim of this interventional, prospective, randomized clinical trial is to evaluate the impact of the antioxidant N-acetylcysteine on oxidative stress in the first seven postoperative days and on renal function in the first three postoperative months in deceased kidney transplantation.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Verbal Autopsy to Assess Early Neonatal Death and Stillbirth

Perinatal MortalityCause of Neonatal Death1 more

The NICHD Global Network (GN) for Women's and Children's Health Research, a multi-site, international research network, provides a unique infrastructure to implement an expanded perinatal verbal autopsy study using the FIRST BREATH trial as its platform. The FIRST BREATH trial is an ongoing study of neonatal resuscitation training in rural community settings within Global Network sites in Central Africa, Asia and Latin America. This study uses a validated VA questionnaire to determine COD of stillbirths and early neonatal deaths among participants in the FIRST BREATH study. We propose to expand the usefulness of perinatal verbal autopsy methodology in two ways. First by assessing whether the Community Coordinator (a non-physician health worker) can assign COD with a high level of concordance comparable to a Physician Panel, and second, whether the FIRST BREATH Birth Attendant can provide as reliable perinatal information as the mother during the VA interview. Our primary hypothesis is that the COD assigned by the FIRST BREATH Community Coordinator will be the same as the COD assigned by the Physician Panel in greater than 70% of early neonatal deaths (ENDs), when both use the same VA and FIRST BREATH data.

Completed4 enrollment criteria
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