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Active clinical trials for "Hyperemia"

Results 31-40 of 44

A Multicenter Evaluation of Methods to Reduce Hyperemia Associated With Bimatoprost Therapy for...

Glaucoma

Evaluate the incidence of hyperemia in patients using bimatoprost and to determine if simple interventions reduce its incidence and to assess the value of detailed instruction in increasing patient compliance and willingness to continue bimatoprost therapy, despite the occurrence of hyperemia.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Engorgement Study With a Double Electric Breast Pump

Engorgement

The purpose of this study is to analyze the effectiveness of an FDA approved Class II medical device, the Simplisse Double Electric Breast Pump, in relieving the symptoms of engorgement.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Deportalization, Venous Deprivation, Venous Congestion

Malignant Liver Tumor

Patients with multiple primary or secondary liver tumors have a low survival rate unless they can benefit from curative extended hepatic resections with R0 or R1 marge resection. Post-operative acute liver failure may occur after such surgery when the remnant liver is insufficient, leading to high morbimortality. The future remnant liver (FRL) preoperative evaluation is then the key consideration before performing extended liver resection. The FRL volume measurement on computed tomography (CT) imaging is the most widespread method of FRL evaluation. Threshold values of acceptable FRL volume depend on the underlying liver function, it ranges from 20-30% in healthy liver to 40% in cirrhotic liver. However, it recently appeared that the FRL function would be more valuable in predicting post-operative liver failure. 99mTc-mebrofenin hepatobiliary scintigraphy (HBS) combined with SPECT/CT enables reliable FRL function measurement with a threshold value calculated at 2.69%/min/m2, to predict post-hepatectomy liver failure. When the FRL evaluation does not reach the acceptable threshold values to avoid liver failure, portal vein embolization (PVE), consisting of portal branches occlusion of the future removed liver, can be performed. It is now the standard of care to induce FRL regeneration before surgery. Right PVE induces right hemiliver (S5-8) deportalization (portal input deprivation with hepatic venous drainage preservation) leading to left hemiliver (S2-4) regeneration. To optimize PVE results, recent effective techniques have been developed such as the simultaneous embolization of the right portal branch and the right hepatic vein (HV), and the right accessory HV if so, which is called liver venous deprivation technique. Additional simultaneous embolization of the middle HV defined the extended liver venous deprivation (ELVD) technique. ELVD induces right liver (S5-8) venous deprivation (deprivation of both portal input and venous drainage) and leads to rapid increase in FRL function. After ELVD, segment IV (S4) portal input from left portal branch is preserved while its venous drainage through the middle HV is disrupted, resulting in venous congestion. The aim of this study is to analyze the volumetric and functional evolutions after embolization procedures in deportalized liver (S5-8 after PVE), vein-deprived liver (S5-8 after ELVD) and congestive liver (S4 after ELVD).

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Role of Epoxy-eicosatrienoic Acids in Post-occlusive Hyperemia and Thermal Hyperemia

Healthy Volunteers

The objective of this proof of concept study is to assess the involvement of epoxy-eicosatrienoic acids (EETs) in post-occlusive hyperemic and thermal hyperemia responses, and the interaction between nitric oxide (NO) and EETs, using the latest methods for the study of functional microcirculation.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Enhancement of Postocclusive Reactive Hyperaemia by Dipyridamole

HyperemiaHypoxia

The purpose of this study is to determine whether dipyridamole enhances postocclusive reactive hyperaemia by increasing extracellular adenosine concentrations during ischemia and reperfusion. Furthermore we hypothesize that dipyridamole augments postocclusive reactive hyperaemia by increasing adenosine receptor stimulation.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

The Clinical Significance of Portal Hypertension After Cardiac Surgery: a Multicenter Prospective...

Surgery--ComplicationsCongestive Heart Failure3 more

Portal flow pulsatility detected by Doppler ultrasound is an echographic marker of cardiogenic portal hypertension from right ventricular failure and is associated with adverse outcomes based on previous studies performed at the Montreal Heart Institute. This multicenter prospective cohort study aims to determine if portal flow pulsatility after cardiopulmonary bypass separation is associated with a longer requirement of life support after cardiac surgery.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Determine the Effect of Intraocular Pressure (IOP), Optic Nerve Imaging, Venous Congestion in Volunteers...

Blindness

The purpose of this study is to provide data that would give the investigators a better understanding of the physiologic changes that occur and may contribute to post operative blindness. An improved understanding may lead to the development of protocols or devices that reduce the chance of catastrophic visual loss.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Perioperative Kinetics of Reactive Hyperemia Using Noninvasive Digital Thermal Monitoring

Abdominal SurgeryThoracic Surgery

Primary Objective: The primary objective of the study is to characterize and measure the impact of major surgery on the kinetics of endothelial function during the perioperative period. Reactive hyperemia, characterized by Digital Thermal Monitoring (DTM), will be utilized to characterize this during the perioperative period in patients undergoing major abdominal or thoracic surgery. This will attempt to characterize the relationship between impaired endothelial function, the extent of surgical insult, and the risk for adverse postoperative outcome. Secondary Objectives: Secondary objectives of this study will evaluate the following: The incidence of major complications in correlation to reduced preoperative reactive hyperemia The incidence of major complications in correlation to reduced postoperative reactive hyperemia (calculated as absolute value and as the change from baseline [delta]). It is anticipated that two factors (namely, preoperative cardiovascular risk and the extent of the intraoperative inflammatory response) will predominantly contribute to the impaired microcirculatory/hyperemic/endothelial function and should therefore be accounted for in this study. The correlation between impaired reactive hyperemia and these two contributory factors will be evaluated. Preoperative cardiovascular risk will be assessed using risk scoring systems that attempt to infer patient risk according to preoperative co-morbidities, namely The ASA Physical Status Classification System24, The Lee Modified Cardiac Risk Index,25 and The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center Modifiers to the Lee Modified Cardiac Risk Index (an unvalidated scoring system that considers factors unique to the cancer surgical population), and The Metabolic Syndrome. The latter represents a larger at-risk patient population who has yet to develop symptomatic cardiac lesions (and therefore will not be identified by the Lee modified Cardiac Risk Index). Intraoperative inflammatory response will be assessed using quantitative assays for C-RP, and cytokines. Multivariate analysis will analyze for intraoperative perturbations-including hemodynamic (heart rate, blood pressure), temperature, and fluid shifts (blood loss, transfusions.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Ultrasound Measurement of Reactive Hyperemia in Critical Care

Severe SepsisCritical Illness

The investigators hypothesize that doctors and nurses can undergo a brief period of training and then use ultrasound to accurately measure blood flow in a forearm artery after a brief period when this flow is interrupted with a blood pressure cuff, a measurement the investigators call reactive hyperemia. Reactive hyperemia indicates whether the small blood vessels in the body are healthy -- lower reactive hyperemia indicates worse small blood vessel function. When measured by experienced ultrasound experts, low reactive hyperemia strongly predicts death in critically ill patients with infection (severe sepsis). The investigators are conducting this study to determine if doctors and nurses, without specific pre-existing expertise in ultrasound, can be trained to make these measurements accurately. If so, the investigators will prove that these measurements can be applied reliably in real-world practice. The investigators also hypothesize that reactive hyperemia predict the outcomes of illness not just in patients with severe infection, but in other critically ill patients as well. Finally, the investigators hypothesize that reduced blood flow after blood pressure cuff occlusion is linked with other abnormalities of blood, previously identified in critically ill patients. For example, red blood cells from patients with severe sepsis have been shown to be stiffer than normal, so they are less able to flow along the small blood vessel passages of the body. Red blood cells become stiffer when there is a certain type of stress in the body known as "oxidative stress." If the investigators show that low reactive hyperemia, stiff red blood cells, and oxidative stress are linked, the investigators hope to develop new treatments that reduce oxidative stress, reduce the stiffness of red blood cells, and in turn improve reactive hyperemia. Improvements in reactive hyperemia indicate improvements in small blood vessel function. Better small blood vessel function means better delivery of oxygen throughout the body. The investigators believe that this will improve outcomes for critically ill patients.

Completed22 enrollment criteria

Unwanted Penile Engorgement in Pediatric Patients Under Anesthesia.

Anesthesia; Functional

Penile engorgement during intraoperative period is of rare occurrence however when do happens, leads to difficulty in performing and even cancellation of elective urogenital surgery. The mechanism behind intraoperative penile engorgement is complex and involves various factors. One common myth is that penile engorgement occurs only during spinal anaesthesia and not in general anaesthesia. In this study we intend to report the incidence and management of intraoperative penile engorgement in pediatric patients undergoing urogenital operations under spinal anesthesia with/without sedation over a period of one year. The pathophysiology and role of common contributing factors leading to intraoperative penile engorgement are also discussed.

Completed4 enrollment criteria
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