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Active clinical trials for "Wounds and Injuries"

Results 471-480 of 4748

Optimizing Movement After ACL Injury

Anterior Cruciate Ligament InjuriesKnee Osteoarthritis

This study will evaluate if a visual biofeedback program leads to improved knee outcomes after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Outcome measures will include biomechanical movement patterns and markers of knee osteoarthritis on magnetic resonance imaging.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Prevention of Injury in Military Settings Through the Use of Body Awareness.

Traumatic Injury

The POSITION project aims to investigate the cognitive mechanism of postural body awareness as a risk factor for injury and as a target for a primary prevention strategy based on the Resource Optimization of Armed Forces (ROAF) method.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Knowledge Translation Intervention for ACL Injury Prevention Program in Youth Soccer

Anterior Cruciate Ligament InjuriesLower Extremity Problem

Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries of the knee are common in youth soccer players, and show an even higher prevalence in female soccer players. Clinical practice guidelines recommend ACL injury prevention programs (ACL-IPP) to reduce injury risk, yet implementation in amateur youth soccer is low, reducing actual real-world effectiveness. This trial is a pragmatic effectiveness trial for ACL injury prevention for amateur youth soccer players, using a knowledge translation intervention with the Knowledge-to-Action Framework.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Brain-controlled Spinal Cord Stimulation in Patients With Spinal Cord Injury

Spinal Cord Injuries

In a current first-in-human study, called Stimulation Movement Overground (STIMO, NCT02936453), Epidural Electrical Stimulation (EES) of the spinal cord is applied to enable individuals with chronic severe spinal cord injury (SCI) to complete intensive locomotor neurorehabilitation training. In this clinical feasibility study, it was demonstrated that EES results in an immediate enhancement of walking function, and that when applied repeatedly as part of a neurorehabilitation program, EES can improve leg motor control and trigger neurological recovery in individuals with severe SCI to a certain extent (Wagner et al. 2018). Preclinical studies showed that linking brain activity to the onset and modulation of spinal cord stimulation protocols not only improves the usability of the stimulation, but also augments neurological recovery. Indeed, rats rapidly learned to modulate their cortical activity in order to adjust the amplitude of spinal cord stimulation protocols. This brain-spine interface allowed them to increase the amplitude of the movement of their otherwise paralyzed legs to climb up a staircase (Bonizzato et al. 2018). Moreover, gait rehabilitation enabled by this brain-spine interface (BSI) augmented plasticity and neurological recovery. When EES was correlated with cortical neuron activity during training, rats showed better recovery than when training was only supported by continuous stimulation (Bonizzato et al. 2018). This concept of brain spine-interface was validated in non-human primates (Capogrosso et al. 2016). Clinatec (Grenoble, France) has developed a fully implantable electrocorticogram (ECoG) recording device with a 64-channel epidural electrode array capable of recording electrical signals from the motor cortex for an extended period of time and with a high signal to noise ratio the electrical signals from the motor cortex. This ECoG-based system allowed tetraplegic patients to control an exoskeleton (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02550522) with up to 8 degrees of freedom for the upper limb control (Benabid et al. 2019). This device was implanted in 2 individuals so far; one of them has been using this system both at the hospital and at home for more than 3 years. We hypothesize that ECoG-controlled EES in individuals with SCI will establish a direct bridge between the patient's motor intention and the spinal cord below the lesion, which will not only improve or restore voluntary control of leg movements, but will also boost neuroplasticity and neurological recovery when combined with neurorehabilitation.

Enrolling by invitation32 enrollment criteria

Melatonin for Prevention of Kidney Injury

Acute Kidney InjuryAdverse Drug Event

This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of melatonin for the prevention of antibiotic associated acute kidney injury in hospitalized patients.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Sleep Management And Recovery After Traumatic Brain Injury in Kids: Pilot Intervention of Melatonin...

Traumatic Brain InjuryCritical Illness1 more

Sleep wake disturbances compound recovery in over half of pediatric traumatic brain injury survivors, leading to impaired quality of life, and few effective interventions exist to treat this important morbidity. Therefore, this study will conduct a randomized controlled trial evaluating a melatonin intervention started during hospitalization and continued after discharge compared to placebo. The trial will investigate if this intervention is feasible, acceptable, and effective at reducing sleep wake disturbances as measured on the Sleep Disturbances Scale for Children 1-month after hospital discharge. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive the intervention (melatonin) or to the control group (placebo) with a goal of equal numbers of participants in each group and all will receive sleep education. Participants will be followed closely after consent and outcomes will be assessed at hospital discharge, 2-weeks, and 1-month. Outcomes will focus on feasibility (ability to recruit patients into the trial) and acceptability (patient safety and satisfaction), but will also assess the effectiveness of the intervention to reduce sleep disturbances after discharge. The investigators will assess sleep using questionnaires and actigraphy (watch-like activity monitors). Exploratory outcomes will include global health outcomes.

Recruiting16 enrollment criteria

C Scope Visualization System Prospective Study

Knee Injuries and DisordersShoulder Disease1 more

Evaluation of the performance and safety of the C Scope Visualization System

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Efficacy of Prophylactic Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT)

Wound of Skin

The role of prophylactic negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is promising in reducing wound-related complications. However, the prophylactic use of NPWT in reducing wound complications in patients who underwent conventional open harvesting of the great saphenous vein has been under-investigated compering with other surgical approaches. Therefore, this study aims to assess the effect size of the prophylactic NPWT in preventing wound dehiscence in high-risk patients who underwent conventional open harvesting of the great saphenous vein as a conduit for coronary artery bypass.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Remote Ischemic Preconditioning on Myocardial Injury After Noncardiac Surgery

Myocardial InjuryNon-cardiac Surgery1 more

This is a multicentre, parallel-group, randomised, sham-controlled, observer blinded trial, assessing the efficacy of remote ischemic preconditioning on preventing myocardial injury after noncardiac surgery.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Upper Extremity Life Care Specialist (LCS)

Upper Extremity Trauma

This is a randomized control trial aimed at learning more about LCS position and the value it provides to the patient's who have sustained upper extremity traumas.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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