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Active clinical trials for "Critical Illness"

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Nutritional Management in Respiratory Critically Ill Patients -an Observational Study in Mainland...

Nutritional Deficiency

The important role of nutritional management in the treatment of ICU patients has been paid more and more attention. Reasonable nutritional management can improve the nutritional status of patients, reduce the risk of malnutrition, shorten the length of ICU stay, improve the quality of life of patients, and reduce the mortality of patients, thereby improving the prognosis. Many studies have investigated the nutritional status and implementation of ICU patients. It is generally believed that the nutritional status of ICU patients is not good, and the implementation of standardization needs to be improved.The data on the nutritional status and implementation of RICU patients in mainland China is rare. Therefore, the main purpose of this study is to investigate the implementation and compliance of nutritional support treatment for RICU patients in mainland China.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Predictors of Upper Airway Function and Sleep-disordered Breathing in the Critically Ill

Critically IllObstructive Sleep Apnea

This is part 2 of the #NCT01618240 under the same IRB protocol #2010P001919. The primary objective of this study is to examine factors that are related to sleep-disordered breathing and upper airway patency in critically ill patients who have been recently mechanically ventilated. Our primary hypothesize is that sedatives and neuromuscular blocking agents given in the ICU prior to extubation and during the first night following extubation are associated with sleep-disordered breathing. The secondary hypotheses are that duration of mechanical ventilation, BMI, and muscle strength are associated with sleep-disordered breathing during the night after extubation. The secondary objective is to evaluate if sleep-disordered breathing in the ICU can be predicted by standard pulmonary function testing in the ICU.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Renal Resistive Index and Cardiac Output Changes During Resuscitation Predict the Occurrence of...

Critically IllAcute Kidney Injury1 more

Record the renal resistive index and hemodynamic parameters ( record the cardiac output and stroke volume if the patient's next to kin agree to undertake a PiCCO monitoring ) before and after resuscitation for severe sepsis or septic shock patients, to determine whether the changes of resistive index or hemodynamic parameters, especially the cardiac output can be a better parameter to predict AKI

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Towards RECOVER: Outcomes and Needs Assessment in Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Survivors of Prolonged...

Critically Ill

Advances in critical care medicine have dramatically improved the survival of critically ill patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation. However, there are no systematic follow-up, rehabilitation, or psychoeducational interventions for these vulnerable patients or their family caregivers who contribute to survivor recovery and rehabilitation. Major barriers to developing these programs for survivors of prolonged mechanical ventilation and their caregivers include the following: There is inadequate information about the determinants of long-term functional outcomes for a diverse group of survivors of prolonged mechanical ventilation. There is inadequate information about the needs of survivors of prolonged mechanical ventilation and their family caregivers across the trajectory of illness (i.e., from the ICU to the community). There is a poor understanding of the development of ICU-acquired muscle injury. Towards RECOVER is the very first study to identify survivors of prolonged mechanical ventilation who are at-risk for poor functional outcomes, to identify elements of the care-giving situation that put caregivers at risk for poor quality of life and mental health, to catalogue the rehabilitative needs of patients and family caregivers across the illness trajectory, and to evaluate the mechanism of critical illness associated muscle injury. The RECOVER Program consists of Four Phases: Phase I: Towards RECOVER Phase II: RECOVER development and pilot testing Phase III: RECOVER randomized controlled trial Phase IV: Long-term implementation of RECOVER

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

Validation of the Fluid Responsiveness Index in Critically Ill Patients

ShockCritically Ill

Fluid therapy is an important part of the management of patients with hemodynamic instability in the intensive care unit. By increasing cardiac preload, it aims at elevating cardiac output (CO) and thus restoring hemodynamic conditions in patients who are preload responsive. By contrast, volume administration can be deleterious in terms of pulmonary edema formation or other manifestations or fluid overload, especially in patients who are not preload responsive. Functional dynamic parameters that use heart-lung interactions, such as pulse pressure variation (PPV) and stroke volume variation (SVV) are considered accurate predictors of preload responsiveness in patients receiving fully controlled mechanical ventilation. However, in cases of spontaneous breathing activity where heart-lung interaction indices fail to predict fluid responsiveness, one needs parameters able to reliably predict the hemodynamic response of fluid administration. A new index that could indicate fluid responsiveness, so-called the fluid responsiveness index (FRI), has been elaborated. The advantage is that it could be used in patients who are not in control mechanical ventilation as well as in patients who are fully adapted to mechanical ventilation. The FRI is based upon the analysis of continuous arterial and continuous central venous pressure. The FRI is determined by the relation of cardiac and respiratory activity; both are evaluated by means of power spectrum analysis of the pressures recorded. The aim of this study is to test the value of the FRI to predict the hemodynamic response to fluid infusion in patients with hemodynamic instability not receiving fully controlled mechanical ventilation.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

ICG- Livertest Versus New Biomarkers as Prognostic Markers in Critically Ill ICG- Livertest Versus...

Critically Ill Patients

ICG- Leberfunktionstest versus "neue" Biomarker als prognostischer Marker bei intensivmedizischen Patienten

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

Burden, Mortality and Supply Costs in Intensive Care Unit Patients

BurdenDependency6 more

This study systematically observes in a pragmatic trail under real world conditions the association between strategies of therapy (maximal therapy, withhold, withdraw) and treatment success in three endpoint related initial risk groups (high, intermediate, low risk) regarding three endpoints (burden, mortality and supply costs).

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Relationship Between Muscle Strength and Quality of Life in ICU Survivors

Critical IllnessMuscle Strength3 more

The aim is to study the impact of muscle strength measured in ICU and after ICU discharge on health-related quality of life measured after hospital discharge.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Improving Situational Awareness Before Acute Care

Critical IllnessTrauma

This study aims to assess the impact on the trauma team's situational awareness of using a dashboard to synthesize and disseminate available information on a critical patient incoming to the trauma center.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Impact of Capillary Leak and Hypoalbuminemia on PK/PD of Anidulafungin and Caspofungin in Critically...

Critically Ill Patients

This prospective study will explore the pharmacokinetic exposure and pharmacodynamics of the echinocandins (caspofungin or anidulafungin) in critically ill patients.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria
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