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Active clinical trials for "Postoperative Complications"

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Effect of Oral Protein Supplementation on Postoperative Complications in Elderly Sarcopenic Cancerous...

SarcopeniaCancer

Sarcopenia is a condition of reduced skeletal muscle associated with aging. It leads to poor outcome and increased risk of postoperative complications. Achieving protein and energy requirements is crucial point in sarcopenia treatment. In preoperative patients, daily consumption of protein should be at least 1.2-2.0 g of protein/kg/day or 25-35 g of protein in a meal to provide muscular protein synthesis. The objective of this study is to show that preoperative enteral protein supplementation in elderly cancerous patients, who are diagnosed with sarcopenia, can decrease morbidity such as postoperative complications; mortality and improve postoperative clinical outcomes after elective surgery.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Linear Stapler Versus Circular Stapler in Esophagojejunostomy

Postoperative ComplicationsOperative Time1 more

With the development of stapler devices, various methods of esophagojejunostomy after laparoscopic total gastrectomy were evoluated. Which stapler is more advantageous has not been determined. At present, the most commonly used is linear stapler or Circular stapler in esophagojejunostomy. However, there is still a lack of reliable evidence for the selection of the two staplers. The purpose of this study is to explore the advantages of linear staper versus circular stapler in esophagojejunostomy for patients with gastric cancer who underwent total gastrectomy.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Postoperative Analgesia y After Uniportal Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery

Post-operative PainAcute3 more

Ultrasound-guided erector spinae plane block (ESPB) is an interfascial blockade during thoracic anesthesia, first described by Forero in 2016, and is highlighted by technically feasibility and less complication rate. The patient is placed as decubitus position. The anesthesiologists use echo to identify the ipsilateral transverse process at T5 level, and insert the needle to 2-3 cm lateral to the spinous process until contact the transverse process. Then the injected local anesthetic will penetrate via erector spinae muscle to paravertebral space to affect and relieve pain.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Minimally Invasive Esophagectomy Pain Control Trial

Postoperative PainAcute1 more

A pilot randomized controlled trial comparing intercostal nerve blocks, cryo-ablation plus intercostal nerve blocks, and serratus plane catheter plus intercostal nerve blocks in patients undergoing esophagectomies with minimally invasive thoracic approaches.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Totally Laparoscopic Distal Gastrectomy for Gastric Cancer

Postoperative Complications

This study was designed as a randomized clinical trial comparing the totally laparoscopic distal gastrectomy with laparoscopy-assisted distal gastroectomy for patients with gastric cancer, in terms of short-term and long-term outcomes.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Perioperative Personalized Blood Pressure Management: IMPROVE-multi

Blood PressureIntraoperative Hypotension3 more

Rates of major complications and mortality in the first weeks after surgery remain very high: postoperative mortality is still around 2% in central Europe and the United States. Postoperative deaths are a consequence of postoperative complications. Postoperative complications that are most strongly associated with postoperative death include acute kidney injury and acute myocardial injury. To avoid postoperative complications it is thus crucial to identify and address modifiable risk factors for complications. One of these modifiable risk factors may be intraoperative hypotension. Intraoperative hypotension is associated with major postoperative complications including acute kidney injury, acute myocardial injury, and death. It remains unknown which blood pressure value should be targeted in the individual patient during surgery to avoid physiologically important intraoperative hypotension. In current clinical practice, an absolute mean arterial pressure threshold of 65mmHg is used as a lower "one-size-fits-all" intervention threshold. This "population harm threshold" is based on the results of retrospective studies. However, using this population harm threshold for all patients ignores the obvious fact that blood pressure varies considerably among individuals. In contrast to current "one-size-fits-all" perioperative blood pressure management, the investigators propose the concept of personalized perioperative blood pressure management. Specifically, the investigators propose to test the hypothesis that personalized perioperative blood pressure management reduces the incidence of a composite outcome of acute kidney injury, acute myocardial injury, non-fatal cardiac arrest, and death within 7 days after surgery compared to routine blood pressure management in high-risk patients having major abdominal surgery. The investigators will perform preoperative automated blood pressure monitoring for one night to define individual intraoperative blood pressure targets. Automated blood pressure monitoring is the clinical reference method to assess blood pressure profiles. The mission of the trial is to reduce postoperative morbidity and mortality after major surgery. The vision is to achieve this improvement in patient outcome by using the innovative concept of personalized perioperative blood pressure management. This trial is expected to change and improve current clinical practice and will have a direct impact on perioperative blood pressure management guidelines.

Recruiting26 enrollment criteria

Does the Mesh Have to be Fixed in Laparoscopic eTEP Repair of Inguinal Hernia?

Migration of ImplantPain2 more

Inguinal hernia surgery is one of the most frequently performed procedures among general surgery cases. As with many open surgical methods, this repair is also performed laparoscopically. Among these closed methods, the one method is laparoscopic extended total extraperitoneal repair (eTEP). The benefits of laparoscope include less postoperative pain and complications, faster recovery, reduced chronic pain, and recurrence rate. One of the recent debates regarding the laparoscopic technique is mesh fixation. Fixation of the mesh to the cooper ligament can prevent mesh migration and consequently reduce the recurrence rate. However, it has been reported that this fixation may increase postoperative pain. Several studies have reported that recurrence may be due to inadequate mesh fixation technique. In contrast, other prospective randomized studies have found relapse unrelated to mesh fixation. In the eTEP technique, dissection is performed in a larger area than in TEP. For this reason, it can be thought that the possibility of mesh displacement is higher in the eTEP procedure. The purpose of this study is to confirm this idea with a prospective study. There are studies in the literature on mesh fixation related to the total extraperitoneal repair (TEP) technique. However, there is no study on mesh detection in the eTEP technique. The aim of the study is to compare patients who underwent without mesh fixation laparoscopic TEP and eTEP repair in terms of clinical data such as mesh displacement and hernia recurrence, chronic pain, length of hospital stay, and postoperative complications.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Primary vs Secondary Closure of Tracheo-cutaneous Fistulas

Tracheostomy ComplicationPost Tracheostomy Complications1 more

The mean of this study is to compare primary and secondary closure of tracheo-cutaneous fistulas and evaluate the differences in outcomes between both techniques.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Post-operative Complications and Graft Survival With Conventional Versus Continuous Glucose Monitoring...

Diabetes Mellitus

This will be a prospective, randomized, single-blinded controlled trial in which the investigators evaluate post-operative serum glucose control using conventional point-of-care glucose monitoring in the morning and before meals (standard of care) versus continuous glucose monitoring using the Medtronic Guardian™ Sensor 3 continuous glucose monitor. The investigators will compare the average daily glucose level in the post-operative period (through post-operative day five) between the two arms in patients with diabetic nephropathy immediately post-renal transplant. This will serve as a pilot study to in order to power a main study.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Studying How Outpatient Water affEcts Risks With Drains (SHOWER Study)

Postoperative Wound InfectionPostoperative Complications2 more

This is a prospective randomized, controlled, unblinded, interventional feasibility study to evaluate if showering with post operative drains in place leads to an increase in complications. The patients included in the study will be those undergoing breast reductions and panniculectomies at Geisinger Medical Center. The patients will be randomized post operatively into one of two groups: 1) patients instructed to shower with drains in place, and 2) patients instructed not to shower while they have drains in place.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria
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