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Active clinical trials for "Heart Arrest"

Results 261-270 of 769

Pilot Clinical Study of the LRS ThermoSuit™ System in Post Arrest Patients

Cardiac ArrestComatose

The purpose of this study is to determine if the Life Recovery Systems Thermosuit(R) System is able to quickly and conveniently cool patients who are comatose after resuscitation from cardiac arrest.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Transthoracic Incremental Monophasic Versus Biphasic by Emergency Responders (TIMBER)

Cardiac Arrest

The study compares the effectiveness of two fully approved shock waveforms (monophasic and biphasic shock) commonly used to defibrillate (shock) patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest due to a highly lethal rhythm problem (ventricular fibrillation). The purpose of the study (hypothesis) is to determine if one waveform results in improved resuscitation, admission alive to hospital, and discharge alive from hospital compared with the other.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Vasopressin and Epinephrine Versus Epinephrine Alone in Cardiac Arrest

Cardiac Arrest

Recent studies have suggested that arginine-vasopressin could be more effective in the treatment of cardiac arrests. The last published study did not outline obvious improvements in the prognosis of all cardiac arrests but pointed out a possible increased survival rate when arginine-vasopressin is associated with epinephrine. The aim of this study is to compare the efficacy of two successive injections of epinephrine (1 mg) with two successive injections of epinephrine associated with arginine-vasopressin (40 UI) in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests occurring in adult patients. The primary endpoint is the survival rate at hospital admission. The inclusion period lasts 18 months and 2416 patients are planned to be enrolled.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Public Access Defibrillation (PAD) Community Trial

ArrhythmiaHeart Arrest6 more

To measure survival to hospital discharge of patients with out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in community units (e.g., apartment or office buildings, gated communities, sports venues, senior centers, shopping malls) served by trained non-medical responders using automated external defibrillators (AEDs), an approach called Public Access Defibrillation, compared to units receiving the traditional optimum community standard of care (i.e., rescuers trained to recognize a cardiac emergency, call 911, and initiate CPR).

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of SC-V Versus Conventional CPR

ArrhythmiaCardiovascular Diseases5 more

To assess the benefits of a new method of cardiopulmonary resuscitation, SC-V CPR (simultaneous compression and ventilation CPR) in terms of short and long-term survival and lessened cerebral dysfunction.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Heart Rate Variability in Early Prediction of a Noxic Brain Injury After Cardiac Arrest

Cardiac Arrest

Despite advances in post-resuscitation care of patients with cardiac arrest (CA), the majority of survivors who are treated after restoration of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) will have sequelae of hypoxic-ischemic brain injury ranging from mild cognitive impairment to a vegetative state. Early prognostication in comatose patients after ROSC remains challenging. Recent recommendations suggest carrying out clinical and paraclinical tests during the first 72 h after ROSC, to predict a poor neurological outcome with a specificity greater than 95% (no pupillary and corneal reflexes, bilaterally absent N20 somatosensory evoked potential wave, status myoclonus, highly malignant electroencephalography including suppressed background ± periodic discharges or burst-suppression, neuron-specific enolase (NSE) > 60 µg/L, a diffuse and extensive anoxic injury on brain CT/MRI), but with a low sensitivity due to frequent confounding factors. The heart rate variability (HRV) is a simple and non-invasive technique for assessing the autonomic nervous system function. In patients with a recent myocardial infarction, reduced HRV is associated with an increased risk for malignant arrhythmias or death. In neurology, reduced HRV is associated with a poor outcome in severe brain injury patients and allows to predict early neurological deterioration and recurrent ischemic stroke after acute ischemic stroke. A reduced HRV could be a sensitive, specific and early indicator of diffuse anoxic brain injury after CA. This multicenter prospective cohort study assesses the added value of early HRV (within 24h of ICU admission) for neuroprognostication after cardiac arrest.

Not yet recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Cardiac Arrest and Ventilation Method

Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac ArrestAdvanced Cardiac Life Support1 more

Comparison of Manual Ventilation and Automatic Mechanical Ventilation during CPR, Pilot & Feasibility Study (CAVE-I trial)

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Continuous Compressions With Asynchronous Ventilations Using I-gel Device Versus 30:2 Approach During...

Cardiac ArrestCardiopulmonary Arrest2 more

Paramedics and EMT will be recruited among four Emergency Medical Services (EMS) in Switzerland to manage a 10-minutes simulation-based adult out-of-hospital cardiac arrest scenario in teams of two. Depending on randomization, each team will manage the scenario according either to their current approach (30 compressions with 2 bag-mask ventilations), or to the experimental approach (continuous compressions since the start of CPR except for rhythm analysis and shock delivering, with early insertion of an i-gel® device to deliver asynchronous ventilations). The main hypothesis is that early insertion of i-gel could improve CCF during out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, with a reasonable time to first effective ventilation.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

AED-delivery Using Drones in Suspected OHCA

Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Time to defibrillation is the most important predictor of survival in cardiac arrest. Traditional emergency medical system response is often to slow. The overall aim of this pilot study is to evaluate if drones can deliver Automated external defibrillators (AEDs) to the scene of suspected out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) prior to ambulance arrival with clinically relevant time benefits.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Referral of Callers to Retrieve Drone-delivered AEDs in Out-of-hospital Cardiac Arrest

Out-Of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Time to defibrillation is the most important predictor of survival in cardiac arrest. Recent studies have shown that unmanned drones can deliver AEDs to the site of real life out-of hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) before ambulance arrival. Although an AED is available in the close vicinity, they are seldom used. The overall aim of this study is to provide an interventional bundle directed towards the dispatch centre and evaluate referral of callers to retrieve drone-delivered AEDs so that they may be attached in cases out-of-hospital cardiac arrest.

Completed11 enrollment criteria
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