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Active clinical trials for "Acute Kidney Injury"

Results 841-850 of 1194

Arterial Stiffness and AKI Post-CABG

Acute Kidney Injury

Acute Kidney Injury is a condition where your kidneys suddenly stop working properly and usually occurs if you are already unwell with an illness and can happen after having surgery. Having an episode of acute kidney injury increases the risk of progression to chronic kidney disease (CKD) later on and decreases long-term survival. It also has a major socioeconomic impact with regards to admissions and length of hospital stay. There is currently no universally accepted treatment or method of identifying patients that are at risk. The investigators aim to measure arterial stiffness in patients prior to them undergoing cardiac surgery to investigate whether this measurement is associated with an increased risk of patients developing acute kidney injury after surgery. The investigators are planning to measure arterial stiffness, and examine a blood sample, for kidney health-related levels to determine whether there is an association between those patients who have stiff arterial vessels and those patients who may develop acute kidney injury after surgery.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Acute Kidney Injury Predictor Validation Study

Critical IllnessAcute Kidney Injury

Purpose: To evaluate the performance of AKIpredictor, a computer-based algorithm that predicts the development of AKI in the 7 days following ICU admission, by comparing it with similar predictions made by attending physicians. Primary objective: To compare the performances of AKIpredictor and physicians in predicting AKI stage 2 or 3 in the 7 days following ICU admission Secondary objective(s): To investigate the influence of the level of seniority of the physician on the accuracy of the predictions; feasibility of making predictions within a 3 hour window for physicians Trial Design: Monocentric, prospective, longitudinal, non-interventional Endpoints: Primary: comparing the area under the ROC curves of the AKIpredictor and physicians. Secondary: estimation of PPV, NPV, sensitivity and specificity of both predictors at different thresholds; evaluation of alternative negative endpoints (ICU readmission after discharge, death); subgroup analyses. Sample Size: This is a pilot study. Sample size calculations to obtain sufficient power are not feasible due to lack of previous studies. The investigation will be conducted with a preset end time on June 30th. The investigators expect to include approximately 150 patients. Summary of eligibility criteria: All adult patients admitted to UZ Leuven's surgical ICU in the period of the study, with the exclusion of those with end-stage renal disease or AKI already present at the time of admission

Completed2 enrollment criteria

RRI Compared With NephroCheckTM to Predict Acute Renal Failure After Cardiac Surgery.

Cardiac SurgeryExtracorporeal Circulation2 more

Postoperative acute renal failure is a frequent complication after cardiac surgery. The current practice cannot predict Acute Kidney Injuries (AKI) early enough to reduce a significant kidney assault and prevent an organic dysfunction leading to cortical tubular necrosis. Several recent studies in cardiac surgery have shown that, both sonographic criteria, such as the Renal Resistive Index (IRR) and urinary biomarkers can predict AKI promptly. These urinary biomarkers are the 'tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases' (TIMP-2) and the 'insulin-like growth factor binding protein' (IGFBP7). These two proteins are sought noninvasively, directly in the urine, within the same test called 'NephroCheckTM'. These markers, ultrasonographic and biologic, have the advantage of being easy to perform, accessible and seem to have both high sensitivity and specificity to predict AKI promptly after cardiac surgery. Thus, the IRR and the NephroCheckTM test could become essential tests to guide clinicians in determining rapidly whether a patient will develop AKI. However, so far, no study has compared these markers yet. Therefore, the aim of this prospective observational study will be to compare the effectiveness of the IRR with the NephroCheckTM to predict AKI promptly after cardiac surgery. The secondary outcome will be to determine the threshold of these markers from which patients will be likely to develop AKI

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Norwegian Intensive Care Unit Dalteparin Effect Study

Acute Kidney InjuryDeep Venous Thrombosis

The main purpose of the NORIDES study is to investigate the effect of pharmacological thromboprophylaxis with low molecular weight heparins (LMWHs) in critically ill patients, and how it is affected by presence of acute kidney injury (AKI) and treatment with hemodialysis. The main objective is to compare the prophylactic effect of dalteparin in intensive care unit (ICU) patients with AKI and Citrate-Calcium dialysis (CiCa-dialysis) with a control group of ICU patients with normal kidney function. Our main hypothesis is that CiCa-dialysis reduces dalteparin effect, and that patients undergoing CiCa-dialysis do not achieve adequate prophylaxis against venous thromboembolism (VTE). The primary endpoint is development of DVT during ICU stay, the secondary endpoint inadequate heparin effect measured in blood samples.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Efficacy and Safety of Alprostadil Prevent Contrast Induced Nephropathy

Kidney DiseasesDiabetes Mellitus4 more

The aim of this prospective, randomized, controlled study is to investigate the effect of pretreatment with intravenous Alprostadil on the incidence of CIN in a high-risk population of patients with both type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and CKD undergoing coronary angiography, and evaluate the influence of such potential benefit on short-term outcome.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

N-acetylcysteine to Prevent Renal Failure

Kidney FailureAcute1 more

The purpose of this study is to determine the possible effect nephroprotective of N-acetylcysteine in patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing elective coronary artery bypass grafting by serial evaluation of renal function and to evaluate whether treatment reduces cardiac mortality, cardiac events and Global mortality, if it interferes with oxidative stress and inflammation and the need for dialysis.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

Acute Kidney Injury Neutrophil Gelatinase-Associated Lipocalin Evaluation of Symptomatic Heart Failure...

Acute Decompensated Heart FailureAcute Kidney Injury

AKINESIS is a clinical study to assess the utility of blood and urine NGAL tests in predicting worsening kidney function in patients who present with acute heart failure (AHF) and who are treated with diuretics. It is believed that rising NGAL levels in the blood and/or urine can predict acute kidney injury. It is also believed that patients who are admitted to the hospital with high NGAL levels in the blood/urine will have poorer outcomes.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Study of the Prediction of Acute Kidney Injury in Children Using Risk Stratification and Biomarkers...

Renal AnginaAcute Kidney Injury

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common clinical event with severe consequences. In the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU), AKI occurs in almost 10% of all patients and evidence suggests that children are dying not just with AKI, but from AKI. Unfortunately, the treatment for AKI is limited to a great extent by delayed diagnosis. Reliance on markers of kidney injury that change only when significant damage has already occurred has rendered potential therapies ineffective. For this reason, identification of new markers of AKI that change early in the course of injury is paramount. While new AKI biomarkers have been identified, their performance in the general PICU population is variable. The investigators recently proposed the concept of 'renal angina' as a way to risk stratify patients in the ICU for AKI risk. In the AKI-CHERUB study, the investigators propose to study renal angina in PICU patients alone and in combination with urinary biomarkers for AKI prediction. The investigators hypothesize that renal angina will increase the predictive precision of urinary biomarkers for AKI.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Mineral-Homeostasis in Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy

Acute Renal Failure

Acute renal failure is a common complication in intensive care unit patients. In 10% of cases renal replacement therapy becomes necessary. Current devices have increase filter patency and efficacy. However, magnesium, calcium and phosphate are eliminated as well. However, the extend of this elimination hase not been quantified. Thus, we want to record retrospectively how often abnormal values for phosphate, magnesium and calcium occurred during routine renal replacement therapy in 2011 and 2012. prospectively evaluate the same parameters during routine treatment in 2013 and 2014

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Magnesium Balance of Citrate-based Continuous Venovenous Hemofiltration, Effect of Citrate Dose....

Critically IllAcute Kidney Injury

Rationale: A higher citrate dose during continuous venovenous hemofiltration provides better anticoagulation but possibly a higher risk of citrate accumulation in case of metabolic limitations. A higher citrate dose also increases magnesium loss in ultrafiltrate, while a negative magnesium balance is unwanted. Objective: Aim of this study is to determine the magnesium balance of citrate-based continuous veno-venous hemofiltration (CVVH) and to determine whether and to which extent the magnesium balance depends on citrate dose. Study design and methods: A prospective randomized study conducted in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury (AKI), treated with CVVH, with either low dose citrate (2.5 mmol/L blood flow in the filter) or high dose citrate (4.5 mmol/L blood flow in the filter) as anti-coagulant, targeting a postfilter ionized Calcium (iCa) of resp. 1.3-1.6 mg/dL (0.325-0.4 mmol/L) and 0.8-1.1 mg/dL (0.2-0.275 mmol/L). Post-filter blood as well as effluent aliquots and bloodconcentrations in the patient are tested for the following variables: (0 , 2 , 4, 6, 12 and 24 hrs): Total Magnesium (tMg) and total Calcium (tCa), ionized Ca (iCa)(bloodgas analyzer). In addition, hematocrit, albumin, total protein, ureum and creatinine and parathormone (PTH) are determined in arterial blood at 0 and 24 hrs or at the time of protocol exit and citrate concentrations in postfilter and arterial blood at 1 and 24 hrs or at protocol exit. Sample sites: arterial line, postfilter port (after postdilution and calcium compensation), effluent sample. All flow rates to be noted. Study population: Twenty patients admitted to intensive care, requiring continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) for AKI. Intervention: Anti-coagulation with either low dose citraat (2.5 mmol/L blood flow) or high dose citraat (4.5 mmol/L blood flow) targeting postfilter iCa of resp. 1.3-1.6 and 0.8-1.1 mg/dL. Both regimens are within standard protocolled CVVH treatment in the intensive care department.

Completed7 enrollment criteria
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