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Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

Results 4371-4380 of 4748

Biomarker Rule in/Out in Patients With Acute Diseases for Validation of AKI (BRAVA) Acute Kidney...

Acute Kidney Injury

The presence or development of AKI impacts on outcomes in patients presenting with acute conditions to the ED. As a result, treating physicians are often concerned with the risk of AKI and take such risk in consideration when making subsequent therapeutic and diagnostic decisions which may result in delaying or withholding therapeutic measures in order to prevent further kidney damage (i.e. avoid imaging studies with contrast media). If clinicians could be informed early that a patient is at minimal risk for AKI, they could deploy timely and optimal diagnostic and treatment procedures for the underlying disease of the patient without major concerns for causing or exacerbating kidney damage

Completed21 enrollment criteria

Impairing Drugs and Alcohol as Risk Factors for Traumatic Injuries

Trauma Injury

Impairing drugs and alcohol are major risk factors for traumatic injuries. Still there is to date little knowledge to what extent these factors affect the epidemiology of trauma. Detailed mapping of risk factors improve targeting and efficiency of primary injury prevention. The aim of this project is therefore to facilitate injury prevention through improved data collection and analysis on impairing drugs and alcohol as a contributing and modifiable factor in injury morbidity and mortality. Study question: What is the toxicological profile among patients with suspected severe traumatic injury? Study design: a prospective population-based and national observational study will analyse toxicology from blood samples of all trauma admission during a 12 month study period.

Completed3 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

Occult Pneumothorax in Patients With Blunt or Penetrating Trauma

Pneumothorax; AcuteTrauma Chest

Pneumothorax is a common life-threatening complication, frequently seen in patients who have been admitted to the emergency department and intensive care unit. This study aimed to describe the features of patients with pneumothorax due to blunt or penetrating trauma. A total of 615 patients admitted to the emergency department between January 2008 and December 2010 due to multi-trauma, and underwent both chest x-ray and computed chest tomography were included in the study. There were 157 patients with a diagnosis of pneumothorax. Fifty-five of them were excluded because of the eligible criteria. The final study population included 105 patients. The computed chest tomography reading was considered as the gold standard for the occult pneumothorax diagnosis. Data on patient characteristics, trauma types, accompanied traumas, etiology of the chest trauma, and chest x-ray, and computed chest tomography results were recorded.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Meniscal Lesions in Return to Sport After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction

ACL InjuryMeniscus Lesion1 more

Most athletes who undergo Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction (ACLR) plan to return to some level of sporting (RTS) activity. However, rates of return to pre-injury sport are often less than might be expected and many factors influence whether individuals return to sport after this surgery. This study aims to better understand the role of meniscal lesions in RTS and to assess the advantage of the integrated evaluation with clinical, biomechanical and psychological tests to decide the correct RTS timing in non-professional athletes undergoing ACLR.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Epidemiology of Injuries in Elite Badminton Players: a Prospective Study

Sport Injury

Objective: To determine the incidence and characteristics of injuries in elite badminton players over a competitive season. Design: 12-months prospective cohort study Setting: The French National Institute of Sport, Expertise, and Performance (INSEP). Participants: Twenty international elite badminton players Independent variables: The type, the location, the occurrence of the injury (match or training), the footwork type, the type of shot and the perceived fatigue were collected. Main Outcome Measures: Injury incidence rates were calculated per 1000 hours of play (Hop).

Completed6 enrollment criteria

The Association Between the Duration of Acute Kidney Injury and New-onset Chronic Kidney Disease...

Acute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney Disease5 more

The investigators aimed to evaluate the association between the duration and stage of acute kidney injury (AKI) and the development of chronic kidney disease during postoperative three years in patients undergoing cardiac or thoracic aortic surgery.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Retrospective Analysis of a Population of Patients With With Severe Traumatic Head Injury and Woken...

Traumatic Head Injury

Observational retrospective study that included all patients meeting the inclusion criteria from 1st January 2014 to 31st December 2015. The objective of the study is to describe and compare two populations of patients with severe traumatic head injury arriving under sedation in the Department in whom the sedation was not continued.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Trauma Specific Frailty Index

Physical Trauma

Increasing age is a known predictor of morbidity and mortality after a traumatic injury with worst outcomes seen in patients with age greater than 65 years. Geriatric trauma patients are a unique cohort of patients who are highly prone to develop decompensated state following the stress of traumatic event leading to adverse outcomes. In a prospective study the primary site demonstrated the presence of frailty syndrome as a better predictor of in-hospital complications and adverse discharge disposition among geriatric trauma patients than age. Presently, Methodist Dallas Medical Center aims to participate in the large scale prospective multi-institutional validation of TSFI to assess the sensitivity and specificity of Trauma Specific Frailty Index in predicting adverse outcomes through a diverse account utilizing multiple facilities.

Completed4 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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