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Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

Results 1741-1750 of 4748

Rehabilitation Research and Training Center for Traumatic Brain Injury Interventions--Teen Online...

Traumatic Brain Injury

This study will evaluate the effectiveness of an Internet-based psychosocial treatment in improving problem-solving, communication skills, stress management strategies, and coping among teens who have had a traumatic brain injury and their families.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Acupuncture and Post-Surgical Wound Healing

Postoperative ComplicationsSurgical Wound Infection1 more

The purpose of this study is to determine if acupuncture improves wound healing. Since we, the investigators at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), know that how much oxygen is delivered to tissue is the best predictor of how well a wound will heal, we are measuring changes in tissue oxygen of wounds before and after acupuncture treatments. We are focusing on the leg wounds of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) patients who have their saphenous veins harvested in an open fashion since this is a fairly well controlled patient model.

Terminated14 enrollment criteria

Study of Wound Packing After Superficial Skin Abscess Drainage

AbscessSkin Diseases7 more

Superficial skin and soft tissue abscess are frequently managed by opening them up with a procedure called "incision and drainage". It is routine practice in the United States to place packing material inside the abscess cavity after opening them up, in order to promote better wound healing and limit abscess recurrence. However, this practice has never been systematically studied or proven to decrease complications or improve healing. Patients with wound packing usually return to the emergency room or practice setting for multiple "wound checks" and dressing/packing changes which lead to missed days from work or school and utilization of healthcare resources. This procedure can often be painful and may even require conscious sedation (and the risks entailed) especially in children. With rates of superficial skin and soft tissue abscesses on the rise, and emergency room resources being stretched, it is important to determine whether packing wounds is necessary or even advantageous to patients. This study is the first to systematically evaluate the efficacy of wound packing after superficial skin or soft tissue abscess incision and drainage in children. The investigators will be evaluating wound healing, complications, recurrence and pain associated with packing both short and long term. In addition, the investigators will also be evaluating the utility of bedside point-of-care ultrasound use in predicting the presence of pus inside the abscess cavity. This test may be useful to determine whether incision and drainage is necessary for an individual who has a skin infection that is suspicious for an abscess.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury: Methylphenidate Effects on Early Recovery

Brain Injuries

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is the leading cause of acquired long term disability among children and young adults. Deficits in attention and memory are common and persist for years after moderate or severe TBI. The similarity between these symptoms and those of children with AD/HD, the efficacy of methylphenidate in the treatment of AD/HD, and the efficacy of methylphenidate in improving recovery of animals with brain injuries, support the need to study methylphenidate effects in children with TBI. This investigation of methylphenidate in children with moderate to severe TBI aims to: (1) Assess the acute effects of 2 different dosages of methylphenidate on attention and reaction time when the medication is administered to children early in recovery; (2) Assess the ability of 8 weeks of methylphenidate to improve the rate of recovery of cognitive, memory, and attentional skills in children with TBI; (3) Identify the frequency of common methylphenidate side effects in children with TBI.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

A Study to Evaluate Microvessel Ultrasound Imaging of Wound Healing in Patients With Chronic Ulcers...

Non-Healing Ulcer of SkinNon-healing Wound1 more

The purpose of this research is to explore the use of high-resolution microvessel ultrasound imaging system to look for scarring and to monitor wound healing and to see if treatment affects the amount of tiny vessels and circulation around the wound.

Not yet recruiting16 enrollment criteria

The Effectiveness of the Copenhagen Adduction Exercise on Soccer Players With Groin Pain or Injury...

Groin Injury

Groin injuries are among the three most common and time-consuming injuries in soccer, accounting for 19% of all injuries, with 0.1-2.1 injuries per 1000 hours of play. The Copenhagen Adduction Exercise (CAE) has been showing promising results in improving Eccentric Hip Adduction Strength (EHADS), leading to reducing the risk of groin pain and injury. This clinical trial aims to evaluate the effects of CAE on adductors strength, hip joint range of motion (ROM), and Patient-reported outcome measures among athletes with groin pain or injury. The main question it aims to answer is: Does the CAE improve EHAD strength, hip joint ROM, and patient-reported outcome measures among soccer players with groin pain or injury? Researchers will assess the participants' pre and post-intervention to determine the effects of CAE on adductors strength, hip joint ROM, and Patient-reported outcome measures.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

The Relationship Between Ambulation Capacity and Piriformis Muscle in Patients With Chronic Spinal...

Spinal Cord Injuries

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a neurological condition causing paralysis, sensory abolishmentS and deficits including circulatory, respiratory, otonomic nervous systems, bowel and bladder functions. For patients with SCI, reducing disability, limitations of the impairment and regaining the walking ability are the main rehabilitation goals. There many prognostic factors effecting the recovery and ambulation capacity of patients. The piriformis muscle (PM) is placed posterior to the hip joint, originates on the anterior surface of the sacrum and the sacrotuberous ligament and passes out of the pelvis through the greater sciatic foramen and separates the foramen into two spaces. The PM is the solely muscle coursing transversely throughout the greater sciatic notch, and it is the main landmark to all the important neurovasculer structures that pass from the pelvis to the gluteal region. PM serves as a hip abductor when the hip is flexed and as a hip external rotator when the hip is extended. It is innervated by branches of the posterior division of the ventral rami of S1, S2 and is the largest muscle among the deep, short external rotators of the hip and provides postural stability while standing and walking. PM has also a functional importance as it connects the sacroiliac joint and hip joint. For these reasons morphology of PM may have a clinical importance for SCI patients whom can walk. Ultrasonography is radiation-free, noninvasive, available technique that can be used to measure muscle thickness in the monitoring and management of muscle changes during rehabilitation. The aim of our study is to evaluate the relationship between the PM and the ambulation pattern of motor incomplete patients with chronic SCI. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study evaluating PM in patients with SCI.

Not yet recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Investıgatıon of The Effıciency of Pulsed Electromagnetıc Field Therapy and Stretching Exercises...

Muscle InjuryPulsed Electromagnetic Therapy1 more

In this study, a total of 69 Wistar Albino rats were used, five of which were in the preliminary study. The preliminary study was planned to determine the ideal PEMF treatment time. In the study, animals were divided into 5 groups (Control, INJ, INJ+Exercise, INJ+PEMF, INJ+Exercise+PEMF). Experimental animals were sacrificed on the 7th and 14th days to see the effects of the treatments. At the end of the experiment, genetic, histopathological, and immunohistochemical evaluations were made in the muscle tissue.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Neural Markers of Balance in Adults With Brain Injury

Brain Injuries

The feasibility study is designed to assess the feasibility of conducting a group yoga intervention and acquiring neuroimaging data in adults with chronic brain injury.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Blood Flow Restriction Resistance Exercise in Lower Cervical Spinal Cord Injury Patients

Cervical Spinal Cord Injury

This study is conducted to investigate the effects of low load Blood Flow Resistance exercise to improve strength and transfer in lower cervical spinal cord injury patientsCervical Spinal Cord injury patients have very less window of opportunity towards functional mode of life. In complete cervical spinal cord injuries only few muscles of upper limb are completely innervated and it is a need to gain maximum output and advantage out of that. Through conventional strength training it is possible to make him do unsupported sitting and transfer But with BFR-RE it may have a possibility to do this procedure in less time than the conventional strength training and patient will save cost of hospital stay as he may timely discharge from hospital early

Completed11 enrollment criteria
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