search

Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

Results 4001-4010 of 4748

Dural Puncture Epidural Technique Versus Conventional Epidural Technique During Vaginal Surgeries...

Dural Puncture Epidural Technique

The study aims to evaluate whether the dural puncture epidural technique (group B) improves sacral block anesthesia during vaginal surgeries compared with the conventional epidural technique (group A).

Withdrawn2 enrollment criteria

System-level Monitoring of Immune Activation Concerning Susceptibility to Sepsis in Trauma Patients...

TraumaSepsis

Sepsis remains a common entity in critical care patients with remarkable mortality. Despite extended research activities, no reliable bio-markers or scoring systems attributing the individual risk of developing sepsis have been found so far. Patients with multiple trauma are at high risk of developing sepsis. Due to local and systemic immune reactions, high plasma levels of known pro-inflammatory cytokines can be found. Simultaneously, certain anti-inflammatory reactions such as changes in immune cell activity and serum cytokine levels, known as "compensatory anti-inflammatory response syndrome" (CARS) take place. In addition to changes of cytokine levels and immune cell activity, underlying genetic reactions are present. For instance, expression of miRNA (as an potential important step of immune cell activation) is likely changed during systemic and local immune reactions. In the present study levels of pro- and antiinflammatory cytokines, a detailed assay of immune cell activation and the various expression of miRNA will be evaluated in patients of multiple trauma on day 1 and day 4. Additionally, clinical parameters of organ function, current infection markers as CRP and Procalcitonin, cardiovascular function such as Indocyanin clearance and hemodynamic measures delivered with PiCCO-system and heart rate variability will be assessed. Parameters of local tissue perfusion will be measured with transcutaneous laser doppler.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria

Patterned Electric Dressing Effects on Open Wounds

AmputationOpen Wound

This study is a pilot feasibility study to determine treatment effects to estimate sample size for future studies that evaluate wound bacteria colonization. The secondary objective of this study aims to observe the effect of PED on an open wound and its effects in wound bacteria colonization.

Withdrawn8 enrollment criteria

Stories to Educate Patients With Ankle, Foot, and Knee Injuries

Injury

Study will test the use of narratives on patient satisfaction and translation of an evidence-based approach to the use of X-rays for leg injuries in the Emergency Department (ED). The investigators will identify patients with foot, ankle, or knee injuries for whom X-rays are determined to not be needed. On discharge, patients will receive the current fact-based sheet or that plus a narrative explaining the work-up and treatment of these injuries. Outcomes will be assessed by a survey measuring patient satisfaction and understanding.

Withdrawn9 enrollment criteria

Importance of Substance P in Intracranial Pressure Elevation Following Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic brain (TBI) injury is the major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide especially in population under 40 years of age and has a significant socioeconomic impact. TBI results from the head impacting with an object or from acceleration/deceleration forces that produce vigorous movement of the brain within the skull, with the resultant mechanical forces potentially damaging neurones and blood vessels and causing irreversible, primary brain injury. Primary injury leads to activation of cellular and molecular responses which lead to disruption of the blood-brain barrier causing the brain to swell. As the intracranial space is not expandable (i.e. is fixed), this swelling leads to increase in intracranial pressure (ICP) compromising blood supply to the rest of the brain leading to secondary brain injury. As we are unable to reverse the primary injury, current protocols use supportive measures to control the ICP and ensure optimal blood supply to the brain in an attempt to minimize secondary injury. Our understanding of the factors involved in the initiation and propagation of brain swelling in TBI is growing and the role of neuroinflammatory cytokines in this process is increasingly recognized. In preclinical models of TBI, a specific inflammatory cytokine termed substance P (SP) is found to be associated with blood-brain barrier disruption and development of brain oedema in the immediate phase following injury. The aim of this study is to examine the role of SP in the genesis of cerebral oedema and elevation of ICP and thus secondary injury following human TBI. This would be achieved by blocking SP function with a SP receptor antagonist Fosaprepitant (IVEMEND®, Merck) in the first 24 hours following TBI and then continuously measuring ICP and assessing the evolvement of TBI using magnetic resonance imaging.

Withdrawn10 enrollment criteria

Absorption of Rivaroxaban in Patients With Cervical Spinal Cord Injury

Spinal Cord InjuriesThromboembolism

The primary objective of this study is to investigate the pharmacokinetic and -dynamic properties of rivaroxaban after oral administration in cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) individuals. The secondary objective of this study is to determine the steady-state rivaroxaban activity in cervical SCI individuals under long-term therapy. Primary Objective In-house patients will be informed concerning the study and informed consent will be collected. During the screening day, in- / exclusion criteria will be assessed and a blood samples will be taken for assessing haematology, clinical chemistry and coagulation parameters. Furthermore, the evaluation day will be scheduled. On the evaluation day, in- / exclusion criteria will be re-assessed. A venous catheter will be introduced into a forearm or lower leg of each participant for the collection of blood at the specified time points. Skin inspection for subcutaneous bleeding will be performed and vital signs will be recorded. A blood sample will be taken for assessing haematology, clinical chemistry and coagulation parameters. Single administration of oral rivaroxaban in the form of Xarelto® 10mg tablets (Bayer Schering Pharma, Berlin, Germany). Rivaroxaban concentrations will be determined from plasma samples taken before, 30min after and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 12, 24 hours after rivaroxaban administration. Rivaroxaban activity will be determined from plasma samples taken before, 30min after and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 12, 24 hours after rivaroxaban administration using a factor Xa inhibition test and measuring prothrombin time (PT) and activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT). Skin inspection for subcutaneous bleeding and measurements of vital signs will be performed 30min and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 12 and 24 hours after rivaroxaban administration. Secondary Objective Patients under long-term rivaroxaban therapy will be recruited during their annual check-up visit at the Swiss Paraplegic Centre. In- / exclusion criteria will be assessed, and the patients will be informed concerning the study and informed consent will be collected. Blood samples will be taken for assessing haematology, clinical chemistry and coagulation parameters, and skin inspection for subcutaneous bleeding and measurements of vital signs will be performed. A blood sample (4.3ml citrated venous blood) will be taken for assessing the primary and secondary outcome parameters.

Withdrawn18 enrollment criteria

Genetic Variability and Biomarkers in Children With Acute Lung Injury

Acute Respiratory Distress SyndromeAcute Lung Injury

Acute Lung Injury (ALI) and the more severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) are a significant problem in Pediatric Intensive Care Units, affecting up to 16 of every 1000 children admitted to these units. These disorders carry with them high mortality rates as well as numerous long-term effects for the surviving children. As the effects of these diseases have significant social and economic ramifications for affected children and their families, research on the development of ALI/ARDS could significantly change how physicians understand the disease and treat patients. There are a wide range of problems which make certain PICU patients more likely to develop either ALI or ARDS. This research aims to determine which of these children are at the greatest risk for ALI/ARDS by examining differences in plasma biomarkers and in DNA of a large number of PICU patients. We are hypothesizing that significant differences in the level of specific plasma biomarkers or in the frequency of specific DNA variants exist in children who develop ALI/ARDS.

Withdrawn14 enrollment criteria

Assessing Respiratory Variability During Mechanical Ventilation in Acute Lung Injury (ALI)

Acute Lung InjuryAdult Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Healthy biological systems are characterized by a normal range of "variability" in organ function. For example, many studies of heart rate clearly document that loss of the normal level of intrinsic, beat-to-beat variability in heart rate is associated with poor prognosis and early death. Unlike the heart, little is known about patterns of respiratory variability in illness. What is known is that, like the heart, healthy subjects have a specific range of variability in breath- to-breath depth and timing. Additionally, in animal models, ventilator strategies that re-introduce normal variability to the breathing pattern significantly reduce ventilator-associated lung injury. Critically ill patients requiring mechanical ventilation offer an opportunity to observe and analyze respiratory patterns in a completely non-invasive manner. Current mechanical ventilators produce real-time output of respiratory tracings that can analyzed for variability. The investigators propose to non-invasively record these tracings from patients ventilated in the intensive care units for mathematical variability analysis. The purpose of these pilot analyses are to: (1) demonstrate the range of respiratory variability present in the mechanically ve ventilated critically ill and (2) demonstrate the ventilator modality that delivers or permits the closest approximation to previously described beneficial or normal levels of variability. Future studies will use this pilot data in order to determine if the observed patterns of respiratory variability in mechanically ventilated critically ill subjects have prognostic or therapeutic implications.

Withdrawn6 enrollment criteria

Hyperpolarized Noble Gas MRI Detection of Radiation-Induced Lung Injury

Radiation Induced Lung InjuryNon Small Cell Lung Cancer

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the world; each year lung cancer claims over 20 000 lives in Canada and more than one million lives globally (1). Significant improvements have been made in treating many other types of cancer, but lung cancer care has not realized similar successes. Seventy percent of cancers are at an advanced stage at diagnosis, and radiation plays a standard role as a part of both radical and palliative therapy in these cases. Normal lung tissue is highly sensitive to radiation. This sensitivity poses a serious problem; it can cause radiation pneumonitis or fibrosis (RILI), which may result in serious disability and sometimes death. Thirty-seven percent of thoracic cancer patients treated with radiation develop RILI; in 20% of radiation therapy cases, injury to the lungs is moderate to severe (2). In addition, radiation-induced pneumonitis that produces symptoms occurs in 5-50% of individuals given radiotherapy for lung cancer (3, 4). The chances of clinical radiation pneumonitis are directly related to the irradiated volume of lung (5). However, radiation planning currently assumes that all parts of the lung are equally functional. Identification of the areas of the lung that are more functional would be beneficial in order to prioritize those areas for sparing during radiation planning. In order to limit the amount of RILI to preserve lung function in patients, clinicians plan radiation treatment using conformal or intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). This makes use of computed tomography (CT) scans, which take into account anatomic locations of both disease and lung but cannot assess the functionality of the lung itself. An important component of the rationale of IMRT is that if doses of radiation entering functional tissue are constrained, radiation dose can be focused on tumours to spare functional tissues from injury to preserve existing lung function (6). Therefore, to optimally reduce toxicity, IMRT would depend on data of not only tumour location, but also regional lung function. Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) can detect a decrease in pulmonary function due to the presence of tumours or RILI, but because the measurements are performed at the mouth, PFTs do not provide regional information on lung function. Positron emission tomography (PET) imaging may be used for radiation planning, but PET is limited in its ability to delineate functional tissue, it requires administration of a radiopharmaceutical agent, it is a slow modality, and, because it requires use of a cyclotron, it is expensive. Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging to measure pulmonary perfusion as a means for delineating functional tissue has been explored (7-11). Whereas SPECT can detect non-functional tissue, it offers spatial resolution that is only half that of CT or PET, and it does not possess the anatomical resolution necessary for optimal use with IMRT. Furthermore, like PET, SPECT is a slow modality. Given the limitations of existing imaging modalities, there is an urgent unmet medical need for an imaging modality that can provide complimentary data on regional lung function quickly and non-invasively, and that will limit tissue toxicity in radiotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Hyperpolarized (HP) gas magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has the potential to fill this unmet need. HP gas MRI, uses HP xenon-129 (129Xe) to provide non-invasive, high resolution imaging without the need for ionizing radiation, paramagnetic, or iodinated chemical contrast agents. HP gas MRI offers the tremendous advantages of quickly providing high-resolution information on the lungs that is noninvasive, direct, functional, and regional. Conventional MRI typically detects the hydrogen (1H) nucleus, which presents limitations for lung imaging due to lack of water molecules in the lungs. HP gas MRI detects 129Xe nuclei, which are polarized using spin-exchange optical pumping (SEOP) technique to increase their effective MR signal intensity by approximately 100,000 times. HP gas MRI has already been widely successful for pulmonary imaging, providing high-resolution imaging information on lung structure, ventilation function, and air-exchange function. The technology has proven useful for imaging asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and cystic fibrosis, and for assessing the efficacy of therapeutics for these diseases (12 -21). In this project, the investigators propose to develop an imaging technology for delineating regions of the lung in humans that are non-functional versus those that are viable; using hyperpolarized (HP) xenon-129 (129Xe) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), will better inform beam-planning strategies, in an attempt to reduce RILI in lung cancer patients.

Withdrawn19 enrollment criteria

Pressure Over Nasotracheal Intubation Related Nasal Alar Injury

Intubation ComplicationPressure Injury

Nasotracheal intubation can cause injury and hemorrhage of nasal mucosa and nasal alar. The investigators measure the actual pressure at the angle between nasotracheal tube and nasal alar, analyze the relationship of clinical signs and symptoms to build up optimal clinical routines.

Withdrawn7 enrollment criteria
1...400401402...475

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs