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Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

Results 4331-4340 of 4748

A Feasibility Study to Assess Pre Admission Status and Six Month Outcomes After Major Trauma

Multiple Trauma

This study aims to assess the feasibility of obtaining details about a patients previous level of function from the patient of friend/relative, after they have been admitted an intensive care unit (ICU). It will also assess the feasibility of re-assessing level of function at 6 months after the patient has been discharged from ICU.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Self-inflicted Deep Wrist Injuries to Traumatic Deep Wrist Injuries

Deep WoundWrist Injuries

Self-inflicted wrist injuries require special psychiatric knowledge and tactical skills. There is no protocol for treating such injuries. We analyze self-inflicted wrist injuries and compare them to traumatic wrist injuries.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

External Phase MRI in Diagnosis of OASI

Anal Sphincter InjuryObstetrics Trauma

There is around 60 000 births annually in Finland. Around 1-5% of all vaginal deliveries in Finland complicate in a Grade III- IV perineal tear. Because the diagnosis of a sphincter lesion after birth can be challenging the total amount of women having obtained a sphincter lesion could be even grater. The aim of our study is to compare different tools in the diagnosis of obstetric anal sphincter injury. In doing so the investigators hope to achieve early diagnosis of this pathology and thus facilitate early treatment of a possible sphincter defect.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Multimodal Assessment of Knee Conditions

OsteoarthritisInjury of Anterior Cruciate Ligament1 more

The purpose of this study is to assess both osteoarthritis and other pathological knee conditions from the combination of signals that are known to provide information on the knee joint.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Development of a Decision-making Aid for Referring Severe Kidney Injury Patients for Nephrology...

Chronic Kidney DiseasesAcute Kidney Injury

Acute kidney injury is a frequent and growing complication associated with a risk of progressing into a chronic kidney disease. Recent guidelines have recommended systematic consultations with a nephrologist 3-6 months following hospitalization. Risk factors of developing chronic kidney disease between hospital visits are understudied.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Perioperative Evaluation of MMP-9-TIMP-1 System in Vascular Surgery Regarding Ischemic-reperfusion...

Ischemia Reperfusion Injury

The MMP-9-TIMP-1 system has been implicated in many physiological and pathophysiological conditions including vascular surgery related ischemic-reperfusion injury. Our key aims were to establish the early perioperative time courses of the aforementioned system in aorto-bifemoral bypass and aorta stentgraft implantation procedures and to find correlation between the MMP-9-TIMP-1 system and the cross-clamp time. Patients were prospectively enrolled after Ethical Committee approval. Blood samples were taken at four different time points (T1-4): T1: right before surgery, T2: 60 min after the cross-clamp release, T3: first postoperative morning, T4: third postoperative morning. Plasma was isolated from heparin anticoagulated blood samples by low speed centrifugation at 4 °C, and stored at -80 °C until analyzed in a single batch at the end of the study. MMP- 9 and TIMP-1 were determined by the quantitative sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) techniques according to the manufacturer instructions (R&D Systems Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA). In comparison with standard curves, the concentrations of MMP-9 and TIMP-1 in plasma were determined spectrophotometrically (Multiskan Ascent microplate photometer, Type: 354, Thermo Electron Corporation, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA) by reading the absorbance at 450 nm. Plasma concentrations of MMP-9 and TIMP-1 were expressed as ng/ml.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Is Computed Tomography Associated With Survival in Adult Trauma Patients in an Urban Lower-middle...

Trauma

This study is aimed at assessing the survival benefit potentially associated with CT scans for trauma patients in an urban lower-middle income setting.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Urinary NGAL Acute Kidney Injury After Stored Red Blood Cells Transfusion in Critically Ill Patients....

Acute Kidney InjuryAnemia

The study aims to explore the association of the novel urinary bio marker NGAL with the age of PRBCs(packed red blood cells) transfusion in critically ill patients.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

The Role of Biomarkers in the Early Detection of Acute Kidney Injury Induced by Liver Transplantation...

Acute Kidney Injury

Renal dysfunction is a major risk factor for poorer outcome after liver transplantation. Nevertheless, mechanisms of renal dysfunction in liver transplant recipients are not clearly understood. Calcineurin inhibitors are generally perceived as the most important cause; however the liver transplant procedure itself represents a major surgical / hemodynamic / inflammatory trauma that - on its own - can cause renal dysfunction. Creatinine and creatinine clearance are late markers of acute kidney injury and changes in these parameters occur only after substantial injury has already occurred. Even a stable creatinine does not exclude structural kidney damage. A series of new markers of tissue injury have been identified and have the potential to identify acute kidney injury better and earlier than creatinine and creatinine clearance. The aim of this study is to determine whether and how liver transplantation affects these urinary and plasma biomarkers and to study whether the changes in these biomarkers may predict later changes in standard functional parameters (creatinine and creatinine clearance). For this purpose, the urinary and plasma biomarkers, together with creatinine, will be determined serially during the different phases of the liver transplant process and daily until day 5 after transplantation.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

MEG and DTI of Neural Function and Connectivity in Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic Brain InjuryPost-concussive Symptoms

The overall hypothesis is that the long-term cognitive and behavioral sequelae of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are due to selective disruption of the long association white matter tracts of the cerebral hemispheres, with resulting functional impairment of the network of cortical regions that are interconnected by these long-range association pathways. We propose that traumatic white matter injury can be measured with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and that the impaired cortical activation can be detected with magnetoencephalography (MEG), and that the results of these imaging examinations will correlate with neurocognitive status and functional recovery after TBI.

Completed12 enrollment criteria
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