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Active clinical trials for "Infections"

Results 3501-3510 of 6584

Chlorhexidine Disk for Prevention of Exit-site Infection in Peritoneal Dialysis Patients

Peritoneal Dialysis Catheter Exit Site Infection

The purpose of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of chlorhexidine-impregnated disk in preventing catheter exit-site infection in peritoneal dialysis patients

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Study of Pentasa® for Reducing Residual Systemic Immune Activation in Treated HIV Infection

HIV-1-infectionGut Inflammation

An open label study will be performed on 80 people with HIV infection who are maintained on effective treatment with antiretroviral drugs.

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Cups or Cash for Girls Trial to Reduce Sexual and Reproductive Harm and School Dropout

Reproductive HealthHerpesvirus Infection4 more

A 4-armed cluster randomised controlled trial conducted among secondary schoolgirls in Siaya, western Kenya, where clusters are the unit of allocation and schoolgirls the unit of measurement. The overall aim of the trial is to inform evidence-based policy to develop intervention programmes which improve adolescent girls' health, school equity and life-chances. The primary objective is to determine the impact of menstrual cups or cash transfer alone, or in combination, compared against controls, on a composite of deleterious outcomes (HIV, HSV-2 infection, and school dropout) over 3 schoolyears follow-up.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Screening to Prophylax Against Clostridium Difficile Infection -

Clostridium Difficile Infection

The goal of this study is to evaluate whether using vancomycin orally can prevent CDI in patients who are colonized with C. diff who are admitted to the hospital and need antibiotics for another infection.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Can Investigators Reduce Urinary Catheter Use and Lower Urinary Tract Infection Among Women Undergoing...

Urinary Tract InfectionsUrinary Retention1 more

This is a randomized comparative trial investigating two different catheter management strategies among post-gynecologic surgery patients. Women undergoing any benign gynecologic surgery wherein they are anticipated to stay at least overnight and in whom no prolapse or urinary tract surgery was concurrently performed, will be randomly assigned to either conventional urinary catheter care removal on post-operative day 1 or same day surgery urinary catheter removal. Patient satisfaction and lower urinary tract symptoms including urine culture and antibiotic use will be tracked across both cohorts over the 2 weeks following the index surgery.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Perioperative Fosfomycin in the Prophylaxis of Urinary Tract Infection in Kidney Transplant Recipients...

Urinary Tract InfectionAsymptomatic Bacteriuria

A clinical controlled, randomized and double blind trial that included adult patients (≥18 years) receiving kidney transplantation (KT) at the INCMNSZ. The intervention group will receive disodium fosfomycin 4 g intravenously in three moments: preoperative of transplant surgery, prior to removal of the urinary catheter and finally prior to removal of ureteral catheter. The control group will receive placebo in the same moments. Both groups will receive prophylaxis standard for urinary tract infection (UTI), with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole 160/800 mg per day. This prophylaxis will be administered once the estimated glomerular filtration rate is greater than 30 mL/min/1.73m2. The primary objective is to compare the average number of episodes of UTI´s and asymptomatic bacteriuria in both groups after 7 weeks of follow-up. The secondary objectives are to know the incidence of asymptomatic bacteriuria, the incidence of hospitalizations for IVU, the days of hospital stay, the pattern of bacterial resistance, the safety of disodium fosfomycin, and assessment of the function of the graft and rejection rate.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of Oral Encochleated Amphotericin B (CAMB) in the Treatment of Fluconazole-Resistant...

Vulvovaginal CandidiasesYeast Infection4 more

This is a single-center, open-label, pilot study to evaluate the efficacy of 14 days of CAMB dosing in subjects with fluconazole-resistant vulvovaginal candidiasis (VVC).

Withdrawn16 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of Oral Encochleated Amphotericin B for the Treatment of Cryptococcal Infection...

Cryptococcal Infections

This will be an open label phase I/II prospective cohort study to determine the efficacy and safety of CAMB for the treatment and prevention of cryptococcal infection.

Withdrawn2 enrollment criteria

Heparin Binding Protein in Early Sepsis Diagnosis

SepsisInfection

The primary objective of this study is to use heparin-binding protein (HBP) concentration to indicate the presence, or outcome, of sepsis over 72 hours after ED admission. The secondary objectives of this study are to separately evaluate the performance of HBP to predict outcome in patients with suspected infection over 12-24 hours after ED admission.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Randomized Trial of 2% Chlorhexidine-70% Isopropanol vs 5% Povidone Iodine-69% Ethanol for Skin...

Cardiac Surgery in Adult Patient

Despite completion of more than 9 million procedures each year in France, the best antiseptic solution to be used for preparing the skin to reduce risk of surgical site infection (SSI) remains unknown. 2% Chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG)-alcohol is superior to Povidone Iodine (PVI)-alcohol for short term vascular catheter care (Mimoz O, Lancet 2015; Pages J, Intensive Care Med 2016), but studies comparing both antiseptic solutions for clean-contaminated surgical procedures led to conflicting results. The present study will be the first large scale multicenter randomized controlled trial adequately powered to compare efficacy and safety of CHG-alcohol over PVI-alcohol in reducing SSI after clean surgery. A clean surgery was chosen because pathogens involved in SSI mostly originate from skin. Therefore, optimisation of skin disinfection before surgery has the potential to reduce the incidence of SSI. Cardiac surgery was chosen because SSI may be severe, diagnosis of SSI is easy to monitor and to define and infections arise earlier than other frequent clean surgeries using implants such as orthopaedic or vascular surgery. The incidence of reoperation for any purpose will be used as the main objective because there are easy to track and define and are less susceptible to interpretation in an open trial than superficial SSI. According to CDC criteria, patients will be monitored up to Day 90 because mediastinitis after cardiac surgery may occur after the usual 30-day SSI surveillance period.

Completed13 enrollment criteria
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