Individualised Blood Pressure Targets Versus Standard Care Among Critically Ill Patients With Shock...
Critical IllnessShockAim The aim of the proposed RCT is to determine effectiveness of a strategy, where MAP (mean arterial blood pressure) targets during vasopressor therapy for shock in ICU are individualized based on patients' own pre-illness MAP that would be derived as an average of up to five most recent pre-illness blood pressure readings. Hypothesis We hypothesize that targeting a patient's pre-illness MAP during management of shock can minimize the degree of MAP-deficit (a measure of relative hypotension), which may help reduce the risk of 14-day mortality and major adverse kidney events by day 14 in ICU. Endpoints The primary endpoint will be the all-cause mortality rate at day 14. Secondary endpoints will be the time to death through day 14 and day 90, major adverse kidney events (MAKE-14), renal replacement therapy (RRT) free days until day 28, and 90-day all-cause mortality. Significance To date no major RCT has tested this strategy among ICU patients with shock. This pivotal trial will provide evidence to fulfil a crucial knowledge gap regarding a common and a fundamental intervention in critical care.
Effect of Virtual Glasses on Pain and Comfort During ESWL
Extracorporeal Shock Wave LithotripsyLithotripsyThe aim of this study is to examine the effect of virtual glasses application on the patient's pain and comfort level during ESWL. The data obtained in the research will be analyzed using the SPSS 23.0 "Statistical Package for Social Sciences" for Windows program. Descriptive statistical methods when evaluating data; number, percentage, mean, frequency, standard deviation will be used. As hypothesis tests, analysis will be made with Mann Whitney U, student t test, and chi-square tests. The findings will be interpreted with a significance level of 0.05 at the 95% confidence interval.
Is Mitral Velocity Time-integral a Marker of Preload-responsiveness in Patients With Acute Circulatory...
Preload-responsivenessThe aim of this is to assess the reliability of the variability of the mitral velocity time-integral with passive leg raising to predict the fluid responsiveness in patients with acute circulatory failure in intensive care.
Lower Silesia Cardiogenic Shock Initiative
Cardiogenic ShockLSCSI is a Hub&Spoke project with the main aim to improve the outcome of patients with cardiogenic shock in Lower Silesia region, Poland. It consists of one "hub" which is Wroclaw University Hospital and eleven "spokes" which are eleven cardiology departments situated in Lower Silesian Voivodeship. The consortium have unified protocol defining which cardiogenic shock patient and when should be transferred to the "hub" for enhanced treatment options including durable mechanical circulatory support or heart transplant. The "hub" have 7/24 Shock Team on-site supplied with a protocol how to proceed with "spoke" transferred patients including decision making on which mechanical circulatory support implant with subsequent de-escalation or escalation pathway.
Assessment of ECMO in Acute Myocardial Infarction Cardiogenic Shock
Acute Myocardial InfarctionCardiogenic ShockData from case series and large retrospective trials suggest that the early treatment of cardiogenic shock AMI patients with the association of VA-ECMO and IABP may significantly decrease mortality, which is still unacceptably high nowadays (40-50% at 30 days). An important benefit for the patients randomized to the ECMO arm is expected and the risk-to-benefit ratio is expected to be in favor of the experimental treatment arm.
Genomic Determinants of Outcome in Cardiogenic Shock
Cardiogenic ShockThe aim of this project is to understand the heterogeneity of both the immune consequences and treatment responses in CS. We will explore this heterogeneity through identification of transcriptomic sub-phenotypes and their association with outcomes, including therapeutic responses.
Cardiogenic Shock Working Group Registry
Cardiogenic ShockThe Cardiogenic Shock Working Group is a multicenter registry where we collect de-identified clinical variables from the medical records and follow-up phone calls of shock patients from multiple institutions and centralize this data to a single registry for analysis of clinical outcomes.
Assessment of the Hemodynamic Effect of Hydroxocabalamin in Refractory Vasodilatory Shock
VasoplegiaHemodynamics2 moreThrough clinical cases or retrospective work with small sample size, some authors have observed an improvement in hemodynamic parameters, with a reduction or even withdrawal of norepinephrine after administration of a single dose of hydroxocobolamin (HCB) in refractory vasoplegic shock (cardiac surgery, liver transplantation and septic shock). HCB produces beneficial alterations in NO metabolism and may be suitable in vasoplegic syndrome. In addition, HCB seems to be involved in the elimination of hydrogen sulfide which also has an endogenous vasodilator function in the vascular endothelium. By these different actions it would cause vasoconstriction in vascular smooth muscle cells. Previous reports demonstrate that HCB was useful for refractory vasoplegic syndrome. The investigators will conduct a retrospective data collection of patients who was given intravenous HCB for refractory vasoplegic shock since January 2019.
Inova Cardiogenic Shock Registry (INOVA SHOCK)
Cardiogenic ShockTo collect retrospective clinical outcomes related to acute decompensated heart failure cardiogenic shock, acute myocardial infarction cardiogenic shock and compare current versus historical survival rates. To collect Inova Heart and Vascular Institute (IHVI) site specific outcomes before and after initiation of the Cardiogenic Shock team on January 1, 2017. To collect outcomes related to implementation of mechanical circulatory support versus no circulatory intervention and type of intervention (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) versus intracorporeal axial-flow (Impella). • Assess survival at three time points.
Impact of Endothelial and Leukocyte Senescence in Circulatory Shock States
ShockCardiovascular Diseases1 moreCirculatory shocks (CS) are life-threatening, acute organ dysfunction. Advances in critical care medicine have decreased early hospital mortality, increasing the number of surviving patients. Regrettably, these survivors are at increased risk of new infections but also of cardiovascular disease. The investigators hypothesize that CS with multi-organ dysfunction is associated with premature senescence of endothelial cells and immune cells and promotes endothelial thrombogenicity and immunosenescence leading to cardiovascular disease and secondary infections. The aim of this work is therefore to evaluate the contribution of endothelial and leucocytes senescence to the occurrence of secondary events (infectious and cardiovascular) in patients with a CS. It will provide a better understanding of the pathogenesis of cardiovascular and immune diseases following a CS, likely to guide new management strategies to prevent their occurrence.