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Active clinical trials for "Acute Kidney Injury"

Results 511-520 of 1194

Valproic Acid (VPA) for Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) in Trauma Patients

Acute Kidney InjuryIschemia Reperfusion Injury

The purpose of this study is to find out if a drug called valproic acid (VPA) will protect organs (such as the kidneys) from damage when a person is injured and loses a large amount of blood. The organs may not get enough blood or oxygen when a patient loses a lot of blood. After the patient receives fluids such as blood, plasma, or saline and the bleeding is stopped, blood and oxygen return to the organs. This process called ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) is known to cause injury to organs such as the kidneys and heart. VPA is an approved drug for treating conditions like seizures and migraines for many years. However, it is not approved for use at the higher dose that will be used in this study or for protecting organs from I/R injury. This study will enroll trauma patients and randomly assign them to receive either VPA diluted in salt water or salt water without VPA (placebo) and then follow the patients and compare their organ function and overall outcome. This study is masked meaning that the patients, doctors, and nurses will not know which patient received which treatment. The study treatment will be given in addition to the care that trauma patients normally receive to treat their injuries. The researchers doing this study believe that VPA will lessen organ injury caused by I/R, meaning that patients who receive VPA will experience less kidney injury when compared to patients who receive the placebo.

Withdrawn20 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Perioperative Cardiac Output-guided GDT on Oxygen Delivery, Consumption, and Microcirculatory...

Caridac Output-guided Goal-directed Hemodynamic TherapyOxygen Delivery5 more

Perioperative cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy (GDT) triggers fluid, vasopressor, and inotrope administration assuming that optimizing cardiac output (i.e., global blood flow) ensures adequate oxygen delivery and microcirculatory perfusion - that are usually not directly monitored during goal-directed therapy. There is increasing evidence that perioperative cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy may reduce postoperative complications compared to routine hemodynamic management in high-risk patients having major surgery. The effect of cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy algorithms on perioperative oxygen delivery and consumption as well as microcirculatory perfusion, however, is unknown. The investigators aim to investigate the effect of using different cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy algorithms on perioperative oxygen delivery and consumption as well as sublingual microcirculatory perfusion compared to routine perioperative hemodynamic management in patients having major abdominal surgery with general anesthesia.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Pre-operative Short-term Administration of a Formula Diet Containing a Non-milk-derived Protein...

Acute Renal FailureAcute Kidney Injury

Cardiac surgery is associated with a high risk of postoperative AKI with significant morbidity and mortality. To date, no preventive or therapeutic measures exist to prevent this. According to the data from animal trials, a preoperative diet with a deficiency of milk-derived proteins may be a new preventive measure in this context. This trial will investigate whether one week of changing the diets protein source to a non-milk-derived one prior to surgery effectively induces renal protection from post-surgery AKI in humans. Patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery are randomized into two arms. In the non-milked-derived based diet arm, patients receive an appropriate formula diet based on a protein source other than milk derived proteins. In the control arm, patients are provided with a formula diet based on milk-protein. Total amount of calories and proteins is not restricted and - due to randomization - assumed not to be significantly different between the two arms.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

A Study of RBT-1 in Healthy Volunteers and Subjects With Stage 3-4 Chronic Kidney Disease

Acute Kidney Injury

This is a Phase 1b, single-center, dose-escalating study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamic effect of RBT-1 in healthy volunteers and in subjects with Stage 3-4 CKD.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Early Hydration in Acute Myocardial Infarction

Contrast Induced Acute Kidney Injury

The purpose of this study is to determine whether hydration with sodium bicarbonate is more effective than hydration with sodium chloride to prevent contrast nephropathy in patients undergoing primary coronary intervention for acute ST elevation myocardial infarction.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Atorvastatin on Prevention of Postoperative Acute Kidney Injury in Patients Undergoing...

Aortic SurgeryAcute Kidney Injury

Acute kidney injury(AKI) is a common and severe complication after the cardiac surgery. Postoperative AKI increases the in-hospital stay, intensive care unit(ICU) stay and postoperative mortality. Aortic surgery is the most risky surgery that causes the postoperative AKI, and the incidence of AKI after aortic surgery is about 50%. Statin is a 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl co-enzyme A (HMG CoA) reductase inhibitors and is used primarily to lower the level of plasma cholesterol. Apart from the antilipid effect, statin has pleiotropic effects include anti-inflammation, decrease of oxidative stress, recovery of endothelial cell injury and stabilization of thrombus. The pathology of AKI after aortic surgery include not only hypoperfusion of renal blood flow but also thromboembolism, inflammatory reaction after use of cardiopulmonary bypass(CPB) and oxidative stress. Therefore, the incidence of AKI after aortic surgery can be expected to decrease after the perioperative use of statin because of the pleiotropic effects of it. The aim of this study is to examine the association between preoperative statin treatment and the incidence of postoperative acute kidney injury(AKI) in patients undergoing aortic surgery

Completed9 enrollment criteria

A Maastricht Contrast-Induced Nephropathy Guidelines Study: CIN Prevention Guidelines: Appropriate...

Contrast Induced NephropathyAcute Kidney Injury

Contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN) is a side-effect of intravascular administration of iodinated contrast material. It is defined as an absolute (>44μmol/l) or relative (>25%) increase in serum creatinine from baseline values within 48-72 hours of iodinated contrast material administration, and usually resolves within two weeks. In some cases CIN has been associated with persistent renal failure, increased risk of dialysis, and mortality. It is not clear however, whether CIN is causally related to this increased risk or whether risk of morbidity and mortality is inherent in those at risk of CIN. CIN itself is asymptomatic and no treatment for CIN exists. Therefore, the focus lies on its prevention. Prevention guidelines have been drawn up in most countries and been implemented in most radiological departments. In the Netherlands, currently two guidelines for the prevention of CIN coexist, issued by CBO (Centraal BegeleidingsOrgaan) and VMS (Veiligheids Management Systeem). The prevention guidelines aim to increase patient safety by identifying patients that may be at risk of CIN (mostly patients with chronic renal insufficiency), and subsequently administering prophylactic intravenous hydration to the so identified patients, in order to prevent CIN (intravenous normal saline 4-12 hours before and 4-12 hours after exposure to iodinated contrast material). Needless to say, the introduction of these guidelines has had a great impact on patient- and health care burden. In the Netherlands alone it is estimated that yearly 100.000 to 150.000 patients receive the prophylactic treatment, incurring a total cost of over 50 million Euro. Considering the steady yearly increase of contrast procedures and the ageing population, it is evident that, in future, these numbers shall only increase further. The prophylactic treatment prescribed by the guidelines is based on a consensus of the opinion of experts in general agreement that the treatment is beneficial. However, the effectiveness of prophylactic hydration has never been adequately evaluated. Sufficiently large randomised trials comparing prophylactic intravenous hydration with a proper control group receiving no prophylactic treatment are not available, and baseline CIN incidences in untreated populations are unknown. Thus, it is not clear whether prophylactic hydration achieves its aim to prevent CIN. In order to be able to take effective measures to the benefit of patient safety, it is important to distinguish between the mechanisms underlying CIN and the ensuing increased risk of morbidity and mortality: whether it be biological variation of serum creatinine, renal damage, or cholesterol embolism; whether any causality exists between these and iodinated contrast material; and whether prophylactic intravenous hydration can prevent these from occurring without incurring more risks than it removes. These, in short, are the aims of the AMACING study.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

High Cut Off Dialysis in Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome Patients After Cardiac Surgery...

Systemic Inflammatory Response SyndromeAcute Kidney Injury

A high cut off dialyzer (septeX) is tested in patients after cardio-thoracic surgery with incidence of "systemic inflammatory response syndrome" (SIRS) and associated increased risk for acute kidney injury (AKI). Hypothesis: The high cut off dialyzer (septeX) can increase the postoperative IL-6/Il-10 ratio.

Withdrawn14 enrollment criteria

Aminophylline and Contrast Induced Nephropathy in Acute Myocardial Infarction

Acute Kidney Injury

The purpose of this study is to determine whether additional therapy with Aminophylline to hydration with sodium bicarbonate and administration of N-acetylcysteine is more effective to prevent contrast induced acute kidney injury in patients undergoing primary coronary intervention for acute ST elevation myocardial infarction.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Seattle Cardiorenal Remote Ischemic Preconditioning Trial

Congenital Heart DiseaseCardiopulmonary Bypass3 more

Remote Ischemic Preconditioning (RIPC) is a treatment that may be associated with improved outcomes after cardiac surgery. It can be elicited noninvasively by using a tourniquet to elicit transient ischemia over a lower extremity. It is thought to promote anti-inflammatory and cell survival pathways, and thus protect remote organs against future ischemic injury. We hypothesize that compared to sham treatment, RIPC will be associated with decreased post-operative acute kidney, myocardial, and lung injury.

Completed2 enrollment criteria
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