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Active clinical trials for "Delirium"

Results 651-660 of 842

Acute Care for Elders (ACE) Program at OHSU Hospital

DeliriumAge-Related Cognitive Decline3 more

The purpose of this investigation is to assess the effectiveness of a multi-disciplinary Acute Care for Elders (ACE) program dedicated to the care of patients age 70 and older admitted to Oregon Health & Science University's hospital medicine service. The ACE program will aim to improve the quality of care of older patients in the investigators hospital by implementing focused interventions and recommendations specific to geriatric needs and syndromes, including: reduced fall rate, decreased incidence and duration of delirium, early recognition and treatment of impaired mobility and function, careful minimization of medication use, prevention of unnecessary catheter and restraint use, decreased hospital readmission rates, improved transitional care following hospital discharge, and high levels of patient and referring physician satisfaction. Additionally, the ACE program aims to improve resident and student competence in treating geriatric syndromes, and to improve staff and learner satisfaction with caring for older adults. ACE programs have been well studied at other institutions, so the investigators will be implementing a program that is already standard of care, and studying the elements that are unique to OHSU. This will be a quality improvement project. Study participants will be a convenience sample of OHSU faculty, staff, residents and students who are employed by or on rotation with General Medicine Team 1 of the Medicine Teaching Service. Faculty, staff, and learners (ACE team members) will receive the ACE training. Study personnel will conduct prospective and retrospective chart review of patients admitted to the ACE service to determine outcomes as noted above.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Immersive Virtual Reality in Mechanically Ventilated Patients

Mechanical VentilationVirtual Reality1 more

New or worsening cognitive impairment occurs in up to 58% of survivors of critical illnesses and are long-lasting with significant disability and socioeconomic cost. There are currently no known interventions that reduce the incidence of cognitive impairment after critical illnesses. Immersive Virtual Reality (IVR) is the use of technology to create a perception of presence in a three-dimensional, computer-generated interactive simulated environment. Prior clinical studies have demonstrated potential efficacy in rehabilitation of severe traumatic brain injury. The investigators propose a preliminary study for the evaluation of safety, tolerability, and early efficacy of immersive virtual reality for early neurocognitive stimulation in critically-ill, mechanically ventilated patients. The investigators hypothesize that the use of IVR technology for early neurocognitive simulation is safe and tolerable in these patients. This study will also evaluate whether early application of IVR in critically ill, mechanically ventilated subjects, can provide neurocognitive stimulation. 30 patients admitted to the intensive care unit for acute respiratory failure or septic shock will be evaluated for recruitment. 10 patients will be in the control group and 20 patients would have 2 sessions of IVR planned daily for a maximum of 3 days. Assessment of safety will involve monitoring for physiological derangements in heart rate, respiratory rate, pulse oximetry and blood pressure during the IVR session. Assessment of tolerability will involve monitoring for increased agitation. Assessment of early efficacy will involve evaluation of visual attention during the IVR session. 5-channel electroencephalogram would aim to detect objective changes in visual event-related potentials and the IVR headgear will incorporate eye-tracking technology. To conclude, should IVR be feasible and safe, future interventional studies may be planned to investigate its impact on reduction in the use of sedatives, analgesia, delirium incidence and severity of cognitive impairment associated with critical illness.

Unknown status26 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Premedication Type(Pharmalogical and Non Pharmalogical) on Delirium

Emergence Agitation

Compare the effects of pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic premedications on postoperative emergence delirium and preoperative anxiety, vital parameters, blood pressure, heart rate, SpO2, and pain at PACU 15 minutes after adenotonsillectomy .

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

A Study on Noise Exposure Status and the Effect of Noise Management in Pediatric Intensive Care...

Noise ExposureDelirium

This study has two stages. At the first stage,the investigators will try to use noise detectors to investigate the status of noise exposure in the pediatric intensive care unit(PICU) and to analyze the main noise sources in it. At the second stage,the investigators will try to evaluate the effect of noise management on noise exposure and health outcomes of the pediatric patients in PICU.The investigators hypothesize that noise exposure in PICU is higher than the standard.The investigators also hypothesize that the implementation of the noise management will improve the noise exposure and health outcomes of the pediatric patients in PICU.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Magnesium Sulphate and Sevoflurane Induced Emergence Agitation in Children

Emergence DeliriumPostopertive Delirium1 more

Rationale: Pediatric Adenotonsillectomy is a common procedure of brief performed on a day-case basis, in which rapid recovery with safe airway after extubation is crucial. Sevoflurane is considered the inhaled anesthetic of choice in such procedures, however it has been reported that emergence agitation (EA) is a frequent complication in 30-80% of children receiving sevoflurane general anesthesia. The possible effect of magnesium sulphate on decreasing the incidence of EA in children was not adequately investigated. Objective: To assess the possible effects of intraoperative intravenous magnesium sulphate (MgSO4) infusion on the incidence of sevoflurane-induced EA in children undergoing adenotonsillectomy. Study population and sample size: Children 4-7 years, ASA physical status I or II, undergoing Adenotonsillectomy under sevoflurane general anesthesia. 64 patients (32/group) is required to detect a significance difference of 40% in the incidence of agitation between two groups, with a power of 80% and alpha error of 5%. Study design: A double blind, randomized, placebo controlled study. Method: In the placebo group, a normal saline bolus dose 0.3ml/kg will be iv infused followed by a continuous infusion of 0.1 ml/kg/h. In the MgSO4 group, a MgSO4 bolus dose 0.3mL/kg will be iv infused followed by a continuous infusion of 0.1 ml/kg/h. infusion terminated by the end of surgery. Post operative emergence agitation will be assessed by using the Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium scale. Possible risks: Drug side effects such as facial warmth, flushing, dry mouth, and malaise. Outcome parameters: The primary outcome: incidence of sevoflurane-induced EA measured using the Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium (PEAD). Secondary outcome: postoperative pain and rescue analgesic requirements, perioperative hemodynamics, durations of recovery, postoperative complications Statistical analysis plan: Student's t-test or Mann Whitney-U and Chi square or Fisher's exact tests will be used as appropriate. The possible relationship between EA and pain scores will be evaluated with the use of Spearman's rank correlation coefficient Time plan: 6-9 months.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

PER3 Clock Gene Polymorphism, Clock Gene Expression and Delirium in the Intensive Care Unit.

Delirium

This study investigates a possible relationship between disturbance of the cyclic expression of ten different clock genes and development of delirium in patients admitted to an intensive care unit It also investigates a possible relationship between disturbance of the cyclic expression of melatonin and development of delirium in patients admitted to an intensive care unit. Finally a possible relationship between genetic differences in the PER3 gene and development of delirium is investigated.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Determinants of Implementation Success Coordinating Ventilator, Early Ambulation and Rehabilitation...

Implementation ScienceDelirium4 more

There is a fundamental gap between the discovery of proven-effective intensive care unit (ICU) sedation, mechanical ventilation, mobility, and symptom management strategies and approaches that can equip ICU providers with the skills necessary to reliably adopt these interventions in everyday practice. Until this gap is filled, the millions of patients with heart, lung, and blood disorders admitted to ICUs annually will remain at risk for avoidable physical, mental, and cognitive health impairments that may persist for months to years after hospital discharge. In the proposed study, the investigative team will continue their partnership with the Society of Critical Care Medicine's (SCCM's) ICU Liberation Collaborative. Guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, the overall objective of the Determinants of Implementation Success Coordinating Ventilator, Early Ambulation and Rehabilitation Efforts in the ICU (DISCOVER-ICU) study is to develop multilevel implementation strategies to enhance sustainable adoption of the ABCDEF (Assess, prevent, and manage pain and delirium, both spontaneous awakening and breathing trials, choice of sedation, early mobility, family engagement) bundle in routine ICU practice. Using a multiphase, sequential, mixed-methods design, this study has three specific aims: 1) estimate the effects of patient-level characteristics on ABCDEF bundle adoption; 2) examine unit-level variation in ABCDEF bundle adoption and associated provider- and organization-level characteristics; and 3) determine which implementation strategies result in the greatest adoption of the ABCDEF bundle. Existing deidentified data will be obtained from >15,000 patients, >5,000 interprofessional ICU team members, and 68 hospitals participating in the ICU Liberation Collaborative to achieve specific aims 1 and 2. For specific aim 3, data collection will be extended using interprofessional ICU team surveys, a modified Delphi process, and concept mapping to achieve greater understanding of implementation strategies that prove most effective for ABCDEF bundle adoption. Results of this work will directly lead to the development of implementation strategies that are adaptable, responsive to community needs, and account for the cultural and organizational factors necessary to increase ABCDEF bundle adoption. These implementation strategies will then be tested in a future cluster randomized hybrid II implementation effectiveness trial.

Withdrawn4 enrollment criteria

Association of Haptoglobin 2-2 With Postoperative Delirium

Postoperative Delirium

Patients with major orthopedic surgery will be recruited. Participants will be monitored for delirium after surgery. Participants' blood will be harvested for the determination of haptoglobin types, levels of oxidative stress and inflammation. Investigators will then analyze the data to see if haptoglobin 2-2 type is associated with an increased postoperative delirium, inflammation and oxidative stress.

Withdrawn10 enrollment criteria

Association Between Fibrinogen-to-albumin Ratio and Delirium After Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery...

Parkinson DiseaseDeep Brain Stimulation1 more

Postoperative delirium (POD) remains one of the most common neuropsychiatric complications after deep brain stimulation (DBS) surgery. The fibrinogen-to-albumin ratio (FAR) has been shown to significantly correlate with prognosis of many diseases associated with inflammation, but the relationship between FAR and POD is unclear. The investigators aimed to investigate the association between POD and FAR in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients receiving DBS surgery. For this aim, the present study was conducted to provide a new method for the early recognition and perioperative management of delirium after DBS surgery in PD patients.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Risk Factors for Delirium in Critically Ill Surgical Patients

DeliriumIntensive Care Unit Syndrome

Delirium is characterized by changes in mental status, inattension, disorganized thinking, and altered consciousness. Prevalence of delirium in critically ill patients has varied from 20~80% depending on the severity of illness. Despite its high prevalence, delirium is often under-recognized by clinicians due to the difficulties in diagnosis and no interest. Delirium is associated with increased mechanical ventilation days, hospital length of stay, and mortality. The purpose of this study is to analyze the prevalence of delirium and risk factors for delirium in critically ill surgical patients.

Completed7 enrollment criteria
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