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Active clinical trials for "Hypotension"

Results 611-620 of 875

Evaluation of the Effects of L-Carnitine Injection in Patients Undergoing Hemodialysis

Cardiac ComplicationsSigns and Symptoms3 more

This is a study designed to test the hypothesis that treatment with L-carnitine will improve the quality of life and some specific symptoms and signs in patients with renal failure submitted to hemodialysis.

Unknown status32 enrollment criteria

Lower Limb Compression Prevents Hypotension After Epidural in Labor

Labor PainMaternal Hypotension

The goal of this study is to determine whether the use of sequential compression devices (lower limb compression) can reduce the rate of maternal hypotension after epidural, and therefore reduce the incidence of fetal heart tracing complications during labor.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

The Predict H Trial

Intraoperative Hypotension

The aim of the study is to determine whether a goal-directed algorithm based on the prevention of arterial hypotension using the Hypotension Prediction Index reduces the duration and severity of intraoperative hypotension when compared with the recommended standard therapy and if this intraoperative strategy affects tissue oxygenation and organ perfusion.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Comparing the Hemodynamic Effects of Volume Loading vs Non-loading During Induction of Anesthesia...

Post Induction Hypotension

All preoperative cardiac medications will be continued till the morning of the surgery, except angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors. Patients will be pre-medicated with intramuscular morphine at 0.1 mg.kg-1 one hour before surgery. Upon arrival to the operating room, Initial monitoring included five lead electrocardiograms, non-invasive blood pressure, and pulse oximetry. At the attending anesthetists discretion, intravenous midazolam (0.05 mg/kg) will be administered for anxiolysis. Under local anesthesia an arterial line will be placed in the right radial artery and central venous line will be placed in the right internal jugular vein. Before induction of anesthesia for all study patients, Electrical cardiometry device (ICON; Cardiotonic, Osypka; Berlin, Germany) will be applied to the patient through 4 electrodes at the following sites: Below the left ear, Above the midpoint of the left clavicle, Left mid-axillary line at level of the xiphoid process and 5 cm inferior to the third electrode. Stroke volume variability (SVV) was measured while patient maintaining standard calm breathing at 8 breath/minute for one-minute. Patients with SVV less than 13% will be excluded from the study. Thus, all patients included will be considered fluid responders[5]. The baseline data in the form of heart rate, systolic, diastolic, and mean systemic arterial pressures, CO, CI, SV, SVI, SVV, SVR, and SVRI will be recorded during the study period in all the patients. Patients will then be randomly divided into two groups; control group will receive nothing before induction, while patients in volume loading group will receive volume loading of 8ml/kg Ringer acetate over 10 minutes. The volume loading will be repeated until SVV would be below 13%. The volume loading would be given by an anesthesia resident not involved in data collection. For induction, Patients in both groups will receive 3 mcg/kg of fentanyl. Then in all patients, propofol will be injected slowly at 1.5 mg/kg in 0.25 mg/kg increments every 20 s till clinical loss of consciousness. Clinical loss of consciousness (defined as no response to auditory command) will be assessed by asking the patients repeatedly every 20 s to open their eyes. After loss of consciousness, atracurium 0.5 mg/kg will be administered to facilitate tracheal intubation. The stress response to laryngoscopy and tracheal intubation is secondary to marked increase in sympathetic activity and manifested in general as tachycardia and hypertension and will be managed with increments 0..25mcg fentanyl. Hemodynamic changes; 20 beats/ minute or 20 mmHg difference in heart rate and blood pressure respectively were considered to be significant. Anesthesia will be maintained by isoflurane (1-1.2 %). Patients will be mechanically ventilated to have target of PO2 above 300mmhg and PCO2 between 35-40mmg. Any episode of hypotension (defined as mean arterial pressure [MAP] < 80% of the baseline reading and/or MAP <60 mmHg) will be managed by 5 mcg norepinephrine (which could be repeated if hypotension persists for 2 minutes). If bradycardia occurred (defined as heart rate less than 50 bpm), it will be managed by IV atropine bolus (0.5 mg). Hemodynamic data will be recorded 1-minte before the induction, 1-and 2-minutes after loss of consciousness, 1-minutes after intubation, then every 2-minutes for 15-minutes after intubation., the end point of the present study. Throughout this period the lungs will be mechanically ventilated with 50% air-oxygen mixture, to maintain an end-tidal carbon dioxide between 35 and 40 mmHg.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Sonography in Hypotension and Cardiac Arrest in the Emergency Department.

HypotensionPoint of Care Ultrasound1 more

This study is designed to determine if there is any relationship between performing an abdominal ultrasound on patients who present with hypotension and their clinical outcomes (as measured by 7, 30 day and discharge mortality).

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Hypotension Prediction Index for Blood Pressure Management

Intraoperative Hypotension

Design: Single-center randomized comparison of invasive arterial pressure monitoring vs. arterial pressure monitoring combined with Acumen Hypotension Prediction Index (HPI) software guidance on intraoperative hypotension duration and severity. Aim: To determine whether use of Acumen HPI software guidance to guide intraoperative hemodynamic management in the non-cardiac surgery reduces the duration and severity of hypotension. Primary hypothesis: Our primary hypothesis is that adding Acumen HPI software guidance to the information provided by the invasive arterial pressure monitoring during moderate- to high-risk noncardiac surgery reduces time-weighted average (TWA) intraoperative hypotension below a threshold of 65 mmHg.

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Can Continuous Non-invasive Monitoring Improve Stability of Intraoperative Blood Pressure - A Feasibility...

Hip FracturesHypotension on Induction5 more

Background During anaesthesia for repair of a broken hip, many patients experience low blood pressure. There have been many studies showing that patients who experience low blood pressure during anaesthesia are at increased risk of sustaining kidney or heart damage, strokes, having a post-operative infection, or dying. During anaesthesia, in most cases blood pressure is monitored using a cuff which inflates on the arm (the 'normal' way blood pressure is measured in a GP practice or hospital ward). This gives a reading each time the cuff goes up and down, every 3-5 minutes typically. There is a less well used way to measure blood pressure, using an additional cuff on the finger which gives a constant, continuous measure of blood pressure. We think that using this monitor, rather than the 'standard' monitor, will mean that low blood pressure is recognised more quickly, therefore treated more quickly, and will lead to patients having less exposure to dangerously low blood pressures. If this is the case, we hope that it will reduce how often patients experience kidney or heart damage, have an infection after surgery, suffer a stroke, and reduce the risk of death. Methodology To test this, we would need to run a large clinical trial comparing the continuous monitor to the standard monitor. This would be expensive and involve a great deal of work in a large number of hospitals, and so first we wish to determine whether the trial we would like to run is practical, and possible to deliver in the real world. To do this we plan to run the trial first on a small-scale feasibility (pilot) study, where we will recruit 30 patients, half of whom will have the standard monitor, and half of whom will have the continuous monitor. We will see what proportion of the patients who could enter the trial actually do so and complete it, and use it as an opportunity to iron out problems with the trial. If we find it is possible to run the trial on a small scale, we will apply for funding to run a full study. This will aim to answer the question of whether the continuous monitor improves the patient outcomes which were agreed during development with the patient public involvement group locally; rate of kidney damage, heart damage, stroke, post-operative infections, risk of death, and hospital length-of-stay. Expected outcomes and implications. We anticipate we will find the trial to be feasible with amendments to the way it is run, and if this is the case, we will apply to run the full scale trial. If this shows that using the continuous monitor improves the patient outcomes above, then it would represent new, significant evidence that may lead to the NHS adopting it's use as 'standard care' during anaesthesia for repair of a broken hip, and would like lead to similar trials in other operations where patients may benefit in a similar way.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Steroids on Intra-dialytic Hypotension

Dialysis Hypotension

Symptomatic hypotension during (or immediately following) hemodialysis complicates 5 to 30 percent of all dialysis treatments and is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (KDOQI) and European Best Practice Guidelines define intradialytic hypotension as the presence of a decrease in systolic blood pressure ≥20 mmHg or a decrease in mean arterial pressure by 10 mmHg, providing the decrease in blood pressure is associated with clinical events and need for nursing interventions. Common causes of intradialytic hypotension include excessive or rapid ultrafiltration, high blood flow during dialysis, CHF, taking the antihypertensive medications prior to HD, and others. One of the possible reasons that is surprisingly has not been approached worldwide for intra-dialytic hypotension could be more prevalent adrenal insufficiency in ESRD patients or a delay in the appropriate rise of endogenous serum cortisol given hemodialysis is considered by all means a stressful condition to the body. Investigators will assess first the prevalence of intradialytic hypotension at JUH dialysis unit. Investigators will screen patients who developed intradialytic hypotension for adrenal insufficiency by ordering random am cortisol. Then Investigators will give IV Hydrocortisone 100 mg prior to HD to patients who developed intra-dialytic hypotension and monitor their BP response during the HD treatments for 3 HD sessions (1 week, 3 HD sessions). After that, the same patients will receive 100 mg normal saline for 3 HD sessions. Both the administrator and the patient will be blinded for the interventions.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Noninvasive Continuous Blood Pressure Monitoring for Cesarean Delivery

Cesarean Section ComplicationsHypotension

Noninvasive continuous blood pressure monitoring for preventing post-spinal hypotension during cesarean delivery: A randomized controlled trial

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Accuracy of Non-Invasive Blood Pressure Measurements at the Arm, Calf , and Finger

Hypotension and ShockHypertension1 more

The present study was designed to assess, in a population of patients admitted to the intensive care unit and already carrying an indwelling arterial catheter, the ability of combined continuous (ClearSight™) and intermittent (automatic cuff) non-invasive monitoring to detect low mean BP (<65mmHg). The intra-arterial measurement will be the reference measurement. As secondary objectives, the investigators will assess the ability of combined continuous (ClearSight™) and intermittent (automatic cuff) non-invasive monitoring to detect stage 2 hypertension, and to detect changes in BP during a cardiovascular intervention (as clinically indicated but not imposed by the study protocol). Additionally, the accuracy of both devices against the current international standard (ISO standard) will be assessed.

Completed10 enrollment criteria
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