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Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

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Epidemiologic Multicenter Study on Mechanical Ventilation Management in Children With Acute Lung...

Acute Lung InjuryAcute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

PALIVE 1 is an observational multicenter study on mechanical ventilation strategies used in children with an acute lung injury (ALI). The objective of the study is to describe mechanical ventilation strategies in children with an ALI. Our hypothesis is that daily clinical practice is heterogenous among pediatric intensivists as few pediatric data exists on optimal mechanical ventilation strategies in this group of patients. Furthermore, different strategies may affect patient outcome.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

SIC-IR Billing and Documentation

Medical Record DocumenationSurgical and Trauma Intensive Care Unit Billing

Accurate documentation in the patient medical record is critical to ensure proper diagnosis coding and subsequent hospital reimbursement. Multiple studies have demonstrated that clinicians often omit diagnoses which may result in insurance company denials and significant delays in payment. In addition, omitting diagnoses decreases the severity of patient illness which is often used as a risk adjustment tool to compare institution and physician outcomes. Medical informatics has been used to help improve accurate diagnosis documentation as well as improve billing efficiency. We plan to utilize a medical informatics program called SIC-IR (Surgical Intensive Care - Infection Registry) to improve documentation and attending billing efficiency within the surgical and trauma intensive care unit (STICU). We propose a six month study: a three month observational evaluation of current billing procedures followed by a three month prospective evaluation using a newly created SIC-IR billing module. The outcome measures will include the number of ICD-9 and CPT codes at discharge per patient, severity of patient illness based on documentation, STICU charges, number of insurance company denials, DRG relative weights, as well as a qualitative assessment of attending physician use of the electronic billing module. The observational and prospective patient populations will be compared for total patient-days in the STICU, ventilator-days, antibiotic-days, infectious complications per patient, and injury severity score (trauma patients only) to ensure the populations are similar and only the documentation and billing changes can account for our measured outcomes. We hypothesize that the SIC-IR billing module will increase the number of patient ICD-9 and CPT codes at discharge, increase severity of STICU patient illness via accurate documentation, increase total STICU charges, decrease insurance company denials, and be an efficient and well accepted electronic medical application.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Bioelectric Field Imaging Near Human Skin Wounds

Wounds

The investigators have developed a new non-invasive medical device called the Bioelectric Field Imager. They plan to use this device to measure the electric field near small lancet wounds in 60 volunteers. Their hypothesis is that the electric field is an early stimulus for wound healing and the magnitude of this field will vary with wound healing capability. The investigators will compare the electric fields near arm and leg wounds in males and females in the age groups of 18-30 and 65-80. In addition they will measure these wound fields in diabetics and near chronic ulcers.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Spinal Clearance Study: Expediting the Spinal Clearance Process in the Major Trauma Patient

Multiple TraumaTraumatic Brain Injury1 more

The Alfred Hospital receives approximately 40% of the major trauma patients in Victoria, all of whom are at risk for spinal injuries. The potential for spinal injuries necessitates the undertaking of appropriate spinal investigations, and a delay in the completion of these investigations exposes the patient to the risk of a missed diagnosis of spinal instability and of complications of immobility; the potential spinal patient is required to wear a neck collar and be nursed lying flat whilst awaiting the completion and the appropriate documentation of spinal X-ray investigations. The purpose of this study is to identify the issues causing a delay in the process of the completion of the appropriate spinal investigations and the documentation of the results. The outcome of the proposed research will be the development of a clinical management protocol to expedite the process, with the aim of optimising patient care and reducing complications.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Diffusion-Tensor Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and the Evaluation of Perinatal Brain Injury

Brain InjuryFetus and Neonate

The researchers' objective is to use diffusion-tensor imaging (DTI) to evaluate infants diagnosed with cerebral white matter injury during the neonatal period and identify antenatal risk factors, electronic fetal heart rate monitoring abnormalities, and umbilical arterial gas results that are associated with cerebral white matter injury. The researchers' hypothesis is that this new imaging technique will help us better understand how these devastating injuries occur.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Health-related Quality of Life After Massive Burn Injury

Patients With Massive Burn Injury

Massive burns are serious life-threatening conditions. Recent advances in their management now allow the survival of a growing number of patients. The burn care paradigm is transformed: the evaluation of survival at the end of acute care is no longer sufficient for a good evaluation of practices; the attention now focuses on long-term health-related quality of life (HR-QOL).The recently validated French translation of the burn specific health scale brief version makes this evaluation now feasible in French burn centers. The objectives of this study are to evaluate the HR-QOL of massive burn survivors, to compare it to another chronic condition (necrotizing fasciitis) and to determine the main predictive factor of health-related quality of life. This study is retrospectively conducted in 18 patients who survived a massive burn injury involving more than 80% of the total body surface area, or more than 70% of the total body surface area if the injury occured during childhood and who were treated between 1997 and 2017 in our Lyon burn center. Short Form-36 Medical Outcomes Survey (SF-36), and Brief Version of Burn Specific Health Scale (BSHS-B) are used for the present evaluation.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Selective Use of Episiotomy: the Impact on Perineal Trauma.

Perineal TearEpisiotomy Wound2 more

Vaginal delivery is commonly accompanied by trauma of the genital tract. Perineal trauma is classified into four degrees based on anatomic structures involved and severity of lacerations according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (ACOG) and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG). Episiotomy is an intentional perineal incision performed by midwifes or obstetricians to enlarge vaginal opening during the second stage of childbirth and has become the most common surgical procedure worldwide. A routine use of episiotomy was proposed to prevent severe spontaneous lacerations, although it failed to to demonstrate a clear protective role with no benefits both for mother and baby. Therefore the guidelines changed in a selective use of episiotomy, and we have introduced it in our routine obstetrics care. Nevertheless, second-degree lacerations comprise a wide range of lesions, from a minimal involvement to a massive damage of the perineal muscles. Therefore, it was never confirmed that selective use of episiotomy reduce the perianal trauma in the range of second degree lesions. We designed a prospective observational study with the introduction of a new classification of perineal trauma recorded with the usual data retrieved in delivery ward register. The aim is to definitively investigate if selective use of episiotomy reduce the overall perineal trauma.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Assessing Dietary Requirements in Relation to Resting Metabolic Rate in Spinal Cord Injury

Spinal Cord InjuriesDietary Habits

Assess the relationship between body composition, metabolism, and dietary needs in people with spinal cord injury compared to their healthy controls that are age and sex matched.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Mechanical Characteristics of Tendons of Athletes Using Sonography

Overuse InjuryRotator Cuff Injuries

The investigators analyzed the strain of the rotator cuff tendon of baseball pitchers obtained using ultrasonography and compared the change in peak tendon strain before and after the regular season.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Acute Kidney Injury in Adult Patients Supported by VA-ECMO

Acute Kidney InjuryCardiogenic Shock

Post-cardiotomy cardiogenic shock (PCCS) occurs in 2-6% of patients undergoing cardiac surgery, and 1% of cardiac surgery patients will require mechanical circulatory support using Veno-Arterial ExtraCorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (VA-ECMO). Acute Kidney Injury is a frequent complication in this population and negatively impacts the survival. We aimed to determine whether the timing of ECMO implantation influence the renal prognosis of these patients.

Completed5 enrollment criteria
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