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Active clinical trials for "Acute Kidney Injury"

Results 701-710 of 1194

Preventing Acute Kidney Injury and Improving Outcome in Critically Ill Patients Utilising Risk Prediction...

Acute Kidney InjuryCritical Illness

An interventional controlled trial to test the feasibility of applying risk score based prevention for critically ill patient at high risk to develop acute kidney injury (AKI)

Completed4 enrollment criteria

AKI Prevention and Early Intervention in VAD Patients Admitted for Acute Medical Events.

Acute Kidney Injury

The investigators are doing this research to investigate whether multifaceted preventive measures for newly hospitalized ventricular assist device (VAD) patients will reduce the Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) occurrence rate, progression and associated complications

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Contrast RISK (Reducing Injury Sustained by Kidneys)

Acute Kidney Injury (Nontraumatic)Coronary Artery Disease

Diagnostic and therapeutic cardiac catheterization procedures are important interventions to reduce the risk of death, avoid future cardiovascular events, and improve quality of life of people with heart disease. However, exposure to the radiocontrast dyes required for these procedures can lead to contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI); a common and costly complication. There are accurate ways to identify patients at increased risk of this complication and strategies to prevent CI-AKI. This involves ensuring that patients who are at risk have procedures done with the minimum amount of X-ray contrast dye required, and that they receive optimal intravenous fluids at the time of the procedure. This study will evaluate the implementation of a strategy where computerized decision support tools are used to help doctors identify patients at risk of CI-AKI, as well as make decisions about how much contrast dye to use and how much intravenous fluid to provide to patients who are identified at risk of CI-AKI in cardiac catheterization.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

The Effects of Statin on Postoperative Renal Function in Valvular Heart Surgery: a Randomized, Placebo-controlled...

Acute Kidney Injury

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 valvular heart surgery.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Contrast-inDuced nephRotoxicity as Assessed by the KIdney Load-to-DAmage RElationship

Contrast Induced Acute Kidney Injury

We previously demonstrated that the slope of the relationship plotting individual iodine loads against contrast-induced serum creatinine changes ( the load-to-damage relationship, LDR) characterizes the intrinsic nephrotoxicity of the contrast. Aim of the present study is to compare, through the assessment of the LDR slope, the intrinsic nephrotoxicity of two different contrast media using serum cystatin-C changes as the LDR dependent variable.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Pharmacokinetic Study of 48-hour Sevoflurane Inhalation Using a Disposable Delivery System (AnaConDa©)...

Acute Kidney Injury

Describing a pharmacokinetic model of 48-h sevoflurane sedation in ICU patients with acute kidney failure

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Metabolic Pattern of Cyclosporine A and Acute Renal Failure

Heart TransplantationAcute Renal Failure

Following heart transplantation many patients develop acute renal failure in the early posttransplant phase and some are in need of renal replacement therapy for shorter or longer time. The cause of this acute renal failure is most probably multi factorial but many reports indicate that cyclosporine has a central role in the pathophysiology and it is generally recommended to lower the cyclosporine load to patients developing acute renal failure in this population. Several in vitro studies on renal cells in culture indicate that the primary metabolites of cyclosporine (AM1, AM9, AM4N) are less toxic to the kidney than cyclosporine itself. However, the secondary metabolite AM19 as well as the cyclic metabolites AM1c and AM1c9 has been associated with decreased renal function and nephrotoxicity renal transplant recipients. The primary objective of this pilot study is to investigate if the concentrations of secondary- and cyclic metabolites of cyclosporine (AM19, AM1c, AM1c9) is related to development of acute renal failure in the early posttransplant phase following heart transplantation. Secondary objectives are to investigate associations between genotypes of P-glycoprotein and CYP3A5 and the metabolic pattern of cyclosporine.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Association of Intraoperative Renal Regional Oxygen Saturation and Acute Kidney Injury

Liver Transplant; ComplicationsRenal Injury

This study is a prospective observational study of a single cohort of the patients who will undergo a scheduled living donor liver transplantation. The investigators attempt to evaluate the association of intraoperative renal regional oxygen saturation and acute kidney injury in patients undergoing living donor liver transplantation. Near-infrared spectroscopy sensor will be attached to the skin near bilateral kidney areas in all patients and renal regional oxygen saturation will be monitored during the operation. Renal regional oxygen saturation (rSO2) of the patients who developed acute kidney injury postoperatively will be compared with rSO2 of the patients who did not.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Acute Renal Injury During High Intensity Training

Acute Kidney InjuryExercise

The proposed work is designed to be the first in a series of studies investigating the health benefits and risks related to high intensity training (HIT) exercise. Our specific aims are to determine, 1) if participation in a single bout of HIT induces hematological markers consistent with acute kidney injury (AKI), and 2) if risk is predicted by the pre-exercise concentration of plasma proenkephalin-A. This investigation is an observational case control study. In year one, data collection procedures will be refined with ~40 participants local to the University of Wyoming and training will occur for collaborators from Wyoming community and tribal colleges. In year two, data collection will expand to some of the 12 CrossFit® gyms in Wyoming with assistance from the community and tribal colleges. Blood and urine samples will be collected before and up to 48 h after a standardized bout of HIT exercise on ~100 participants. Baseline blood samples will be analyzed for proenkephalin-A. All blood samples will be analyzed for markers of muscle damage (e.g., creatine kinase and myoglobin), and markers of kidney function (e.g., serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen). Urine will be analyzed for markers of filtration function (e.g., albumin, creatinine, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin [NGAL], and kidney injury molecule 1 [KIM-1]). Lastly, the severity of kidney damage will be compared with the number of risk alleles and proenkephalin-A concentration. The investigators envision that the bout of HIT exercise will induce markers consistent with skeletal muscle damage in most participants and, based on literature from other styles of intense exercise, that acute kidney injury will be diagnosable in between 50-75% of participants. Secondarily, the investigators predict that the concentration of proenkephalin-A will be inversely related to the change in kidney function from before to after the HIT exercise bout.

Completed14 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
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