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Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

Results 3471-3480 of 4748

Lithium in Acute Kidney Injury

Acute Kidney Injury

A growing body of pre-clinical evidence suggests that glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSKβ) is implicated in the development and progression of acute kidney injury (AKI). Lithium is a naturally occurring standard inhibitor of GSKβ. The purpose of this study is to examined if low dose lithium carbonate is able to reduce the incidence of AKI in patients undergoing cardiac surgery who are placed on cardiopulmonary bypass during surgery. We hypothesize that low dose lithium might reduce the incidence and duration of AKI in patients undergoing cardiac surgery who are on cardiopulmonary bypass.

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

Post Market Clinical Followup of MolecuLight i:X's PPV to Predict Presence of Bacteria in Wounds...

Wounds and Injuries

This is a non-randomized, single-blind post market clinical follow-up study for which 50 patients will be imaged at the Judy Dan Research and Treatment Centre who present with a chronic and are receiving standard wound care treatment. The i:X imaging device visualizes fluorescing bacteria in real-time. The device will be used as an adjunctive tool in the assessment of the wound and will be used to guide the targeted sampling of a wound (with curettage scraping). The overall objective of this work is to evaluate the positive predictive value (PPV) of the MolecuLight i:X Imaging Device in predicting the presence of bacteria in chronic wounds. The presence of bacteria will be determined micro-biologically by semi-quantitative culture analysis.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Unmet Need for Massive Transfusion in Indian Trauma Patients

Trauma

This study aims to estimate the difference between predicted and provided massive transfusion in adult trauma patients admitted to university hospitals in urban India.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Long Term Effects of Erythropoietin in Patients With Moderate to Severe Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic brain injury is catastrophic event that commonly require treatment in an intensive care unit. Management is mainly supportive aiming at avoiding hypoxia, hypotension, hypoglycaemia and increased intracerebral pressure. Thus far efforts to find a specific pharmacologic therapies have been disappointing. Recently it was demonstrated that recombinant erythropoietin has been found to decrease mortality at six months from injury but without significantly improving functional neurological outcome (GOSe). Whether this survival benefit of EPO is sustained beyond 6 months is unknown. In the current study survival data will be collected centrally and patients alive or person responsible will be invited to participate in an evaluation of neurological function and quality of life. Factors associated with time to death as well as factors associated with long term quality of life will be determined with statistical methods.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Non-Invasive Hemoglobin in Trauma Patients

Trauma

This is a prospective, non-blinded, non-randomized, interventional study of the Masimo pulse oximeter and sensors in a trauma setting

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Usability Validation of Patient Monitoring Device for Pressure Injury Prevention and Fall Detection...

Pressure UlcerPressure Injury1 more

This study describes a procedure to collect a subject's position, movement, physiological data and usability information using Masimo's investigational device.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Identification of Cerebrospinal Fluid With Injeq IQ-Needle During Paediatric Lumbar Puncture

Pediatric Lumbar Puncture

This is clinical feasibility study on the device performance with paediatric patients. The main objective is to validate the performance of investigational device in distinguishing and identifying the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) inside the subarachnoid space during a lumbar puncture on paediatric patients.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Negative Pressure Wound Therapy - A Multi-Centered Randomized Control Trial

to See Whether Negative Pressure Wound Therapy Decreases Wound Infections.

Children with neuromuscular disorders such as cerebral palsy, children with kyphosis and post-traumatic scoliosis have higher infection rates after scoliosis surgery than healthy children who undergo scoliosis surgery. The purpose of our study is to compare the effect of NPWT on infection rates when compared to standard gauze dressing. Participants will be randomized to the "NPWT" or "standard dressing" group. We will compare infection rates between the two groups. We hypothesize participants in the "NPWT" group will have a lower infection rate.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Broad Validation Study of a Management Algorithm Mild Head Injury in Children

Head Injury

Head injury is a frequent reason for consultation with pediatric emergencies, over 95% are mild head injury defined by a Glasgow score greater than or equal to 13. In October 2009, the Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network has published a rule clinical decision support of mild head injury of the child with the aim to identify children at very low risk for clinically severe intracranial lesions in order to avoid the use of CT and unnecessary exposure to radiation ionizing. This clinical decision rule constructed from a multicenter prospective cohort 42,412 American children allows on anamnestic and clinical elements to guide medical decision for conducting brain imaging, hospital monitoring or discharge home placing the child in three levels of risk of clinically severe intracranial lesions. Since March 2012, the French Emergency Medicine Society recommends for the treatment of mild head trauma the child's use of the clinical decision rule provided that it is the subject of a validation study externally. Indeed, after the construction phase and before its daily application, a clinical decision rule must be subject to an broad validation process so that its predictive performance can be definitively established. The investigators' work aims to conduct this broad validation study prospective multicenter way in a French pediatric population, as recommended by the French Emergency Medicine Society, in order to confirm or deny its predictive performance and allow its application and generalization. The investigators will check and if the Rule Clinical Decision is adapted or not to the management of mild head injuries in the French pediatric population.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Novel Biomarkers for Risk Prediction of Contrast-Induced Acute Kidney Injury Post Coronary Angiography...

Acute Kidney InjuryRenal Insufficiency1 more

Contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI) has been recognized as the third most common cause of hospital acquired AKI, after hypotension-associated hypo-perfusion and post-operative AKI. The development of CI-AKI after cardiac catheterization is associated with a significant increase in both short-term and long-term mortality and morbidities, as well as an increase in length of stay and cost. The only marker of renal function that has predictive ability is creatinine and it has significant limitations in identifying patients who will develop AKI. Therefore, a diagnostic test for predicting CI-AKI risk would have widespread clinical utility. The primary purpose of this study is to measure the association between baseline expression of senescence markers in blood using SenesceTest and the occurrence of CI-AKI post cardiac catheterization.

Completed14 enrollment criteria
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