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Active clinical trials for "Delirium"

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Sepsis Associated Encephalopathy (SAE) Biomarkers

SepsisAltered Mental Status4 more

Sepsis associated encephalopathy (SAE) is a poorly understood acute cerebral dysfunction that frequently appears in the setting of sepsis induced systemic inflammation. In fact, altered mentation is recognized as an independent predictor of death and poor outcomes in patients with sepsis. SAE may be manifested by a number of symptoms characterized by a change in baseline behavior, attention, alertness, cognition, or executive functioning. It occurs in the absence of direct Central Nervous System (CNS) infection, and the exact pathophysiology is of SAE is unknown, but theoretically seems to encompass a constellation of mechanisms such as impairment of the blood brain barrier (BBB), endothelial dysfunction, alteration in cerebral blood flow and neurotransmission, circulating inflammatory mediators, cellular hypoxia, and metabolic disturbances, that ultimately result in neuronal dysfunction and cell death. SAE is characterized by an altered mental status (AMS) that ranges from delirium to coma, and can lead to long-term cognitive impairment. SAE may appear early in the course of sepsis, and is often underestimated as an independent factor of mortality, yet the pathophysiology of SAE remains unknown, and there is a lack of specific investigations available to clinicians. Studies have evaluated biomarkers as prognostic tools. The Investigator propose to measure neuron specific enolase (NSE), S-100B, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1), Tau protein, Copeptin, spectrin breakdown products (SBDP 145, SBDP150), αII-spectrin N-terminal fragment (SNTF), neurofilament light and heavy chains (NF-L, NF-H), myelin basic protein (MBP), secretoneurin (SN), and other peptide levels in the serum of sepsis patients who develop altered mental status, to evaluate the kinetics of said biomarkers for 72 hours. The Investigator will monitor the course of the patients' hospitalization to determine whether there are biomarker correlates with survival and outcomes, including neurologic impairment. Finally, this investigation may provide a mechanistic pathway that defines the development of AMS in septic patients.

Recruiting34 enrollment criteria

Risk Factors for Postoperative Delirium in Elderly Patients Undergoing Major Non-Cardiac Surgery...

Postoperative Delirium

The primary aim is to establish the risk factors, in particular the modifiable risk factors, for the development of POD in elderly patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery in a tertiary hospital in Singapore. The secondary aims are: To establish the incidence of POD in elderly patients in Singapore, including the proportions that develop hypoactive, hyperactive and mixed delirium, as well as dementia within a one-year follow-up period; To understand the timeline of the development and peak incidence of POD, from the post-anaesthesia care unit till 3 days postoperatively; To compare the utility and accuracy (sensitivity and specificity) of two simplified delirium detection tools, 3D CAM and NuDESC, against the gold standard DSM-5 criteria, in our population as a means for monitoring POD as standard of care in the future; To collect data for holistic evaluation of neurobehavioural and daily functioning status

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Incidence of Postoperative Delirium in Elderly Patients Undergoing Non-cardiac Surgery

Postoperative Delirium

Postoperative delirium (POD) is the most common adverse neurologic complication that can occur in patients of any age. Its incidence varies across age groups and is substantially influenced by patient-related risk factors. POD occurs in 17%-61% of major surgical procedures. Several risk factors which contribute to the development of POD include age more than 60 years, pre-existing cognitive dysfunction, presence of comorbidities, sensorial deficits, malnutrition, polypharmacy, impaired physical mobility and frailty. Postoperative delirium has several wide ranging and adverse outcomes that are consistently associated with delirium such as mortality, increased length of hospital stay, and increased hospital costs. A recently devised tool for rapid assessment of delirium is the 4 A's test. It has now been validated for identifying delirium in the surgical population. The proposed prospective observational study will be conducted on 150 patients belonging to ASA Physical Status I-III of either sex, scheduled to undergo non-cardiac surgery under general anaesthesia (GA), requiring at least 24 hours of postoperative inpatient care. This prospective, observational study aims to evaluate the incidence, risk factors and outcomes of postoperative delirium in elderly patients more than 65 years of age undergoing non-cardiac surgery.

Recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Cytokines, POD, Health Status, Older Hip Fracture

Postoperative DeliriumHip Fracture Surgery1 more

An investigation of the change in inflammation marker levels across hip fracture surgery and an exploration of any association with change in self reported health status and incidence of postoperative delirium

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

The Southeast and East Asian Post-Operative Delirium (SEAPOD) Study

Postoperative DeliriumHip Fractures

The specific aim of the study will be to investigate the incidences and risk factors for postoperative delirium (POD) after hip fracture surgery in elderly patients aged ≥ 65 years in five different Southeast and East Asian countries. The secondary objectives are outlined below: To investigate factors in the hospital environments, such as noise levels, ambient lighting, nursing ratios, ward bedding and climate control, that contribute to similarities and/or differences in POD occurrences in different countries and health systems To investigate patient factors, such as disease burden, mental health, education levels, and socioeconomic factors, that contribute to similarities and/or differences in POD occurrences in different countries and health systems To quantify the direct and indirect costs, as well as resource utilization, resulting from the development of POD in each country

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

RCT: Trazodone vs Quetiapine vs Placebo for Treating ICU Delirium (TraQ)

DeliriumMorality3 more

The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of trazodone as compared to quetiapine and placebo, in the management of ICU delirium in adult (>=18 years old) surgical ICU patients. The investigators will compare outcomes such as delirium incidence and duration, in-hospital mortality, 28-day mortality, hospital length of stay (LOS), ICU LOS, mechanical ventilator days, complications, adverse effects, rescue medication use, delirium symptom severity, sleep duration, and sleep quality among participants receiving trazodone, quetiapine, or placebo. The investigators hypothesize participants receiving trazodone will have a shorter duration of delirium, decreased delirium severity, and improved sleep quality compared to participants receiving quetiapine and placebo.

Not yet recruiting31 enrollment criteria

Pervasive Sensing and AI in Intelligent ICU

Critical IllnessPain2 more

Important information related to the visual assessment of patients, such as facial expressions, head and extremity movements, posture, and mobility are captured sporadically by overburdened nurses, or are not captured at all. Consequently, these important visual cues, although associated with critical indices such as physical functioning, pain, delirious state, and impending clinical deterioration, often cannot be incorporated into clinical status. The overall objectives of this project are to sense, quantify, and communicate patients' clinical conditions in an autonomous and precise manner, and develop a pervasive intelligent sensing system that combines deep learning algorithms with continuous data from inertial, color, and depth image sensors for autonomous visual assessment of critically ill patients. The central hypothesis is that deep learning models will be superior to existing acuity clinical scores by predicting acuity in a dynamic, precise, and interpretable manner, using autonomous assessment of pain, emotional distress, and physical function, together with clinical and physiologic data.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Diagnosis, Incidence and Consequences of PACU-Delirium

Postoperative DeliriumElderly Patient1 more

This study aims to determine sensitivity and specificity of the Confusion Assessment Method for Postanesthesia Care Unit (CAM-PACU) examine the effect of postanesthesia care unit delirium (PACU delirium) on the emergence of later onset postoperative delirium (POD) as well as cognitive recovery until one month postoperatively

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Feasibility of an App to Measure Patient Stressors in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU Feel Better App)-...

Delirium

This study examines the feasibility and efficacy of a mobile application (app), which enables critically ill patients to report perceived patient stressors to their caregivers.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Biomarkers Associated With Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction

DeliriumPostoperative Cognitive Dysfunction2 more

Loss of cognitive function after major surgery is a significant risk in older people. It can occur acutely in the days after surgery as delirium or in months to years later as a persistent reduction in brain function termed neurocognitive decline. Together these conditions are called post operative cognitive dysfunction (POCD). They can be acutely distressing for patients and are associated with other problems after surgery. The causes of post operative cognitive dysfunction are poorly understood. Studies have been limited by a lack of biomarkers to predict which patients are at high risk of developing POCD. Research suggests silent strokes occurring during surgery and different sensitivities to anaesthetic medicines are associated with POCD. The project consists of a feasibility study to investigate markers that might predict people over 65 years old getting POCD. The first biomarker is a non-invasive monitor of anaesthetics effects on brain function called electroencephalography (EEG): The investigators will identify which EEG patterns predict delirium within five days surgery. The second set of biomarkers are two blood tests of proteins that increase after strokes: these are neurofilament light chains and tau proteins. The investigators will establish if these can be used to predict having POCD up to one year after surgery and long term cognitive impairment up to 5 years after surgery.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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