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Anuria clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02139059 Recruiting - Acute Renal Failure Clinical Trials

Delayed or Direct Ureteroscopy in the Treatment of Pediatric Calcular Anuria

Start date: June 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To compare staged ureteroscopy following initial urinary drainage versus direct ureteroscopy without initial urinary drainage in the treatment of obstructive calcular anuria with acute renal failure in children.

NCT ID: NCT01975025 Completed - Hemodialysis Clinical Trials

Hemodialysis Frequency and the Calcification Propensity of Serum

Intensified HD
Start date: June 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this clinical research project is to test the hypothesis that daily dialysis has favorable effects on the calcification propensity of human serum, when determined by the investigators' newly developed in vitro serum test. The investigators' hypothesis is that shorter interdialytic intervals will result in an improved calcification propensity of serum. The determination of serum calcification has the potential to become a novel measure of dialysis quality in the future.

NCT ID: NCT01637792 Completed - Clinical trials for End Stage Renal Disease

Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Residual Kidney Function in Patients Undergoing Three or Four Exchanges CAPD

Start date: June 2004
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to explore the impacts of different continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) dosage (three 2-Liter exchanges CAPD vs. four 2-Liter exchanges CAPD) on residual kidney function, technique survival, patient survival, and peritonitis in incident Chinese peritoneal dialysis patients.

NCT ID: NCT01009372 Completed - Stress Physiology Clinical Trials

The Intermittent Pneumoperitoneum Scheme of Work Breaks in Complex Laparoscopic Surgery

IPP
Start date: January 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Many people spanning from air traffic controllers to simple production line workers share regular compulsive breaks to revert fatigue whilst they work. This is uncommon for medical operators - a macho image is still as prevalent in real life as it is in countless TV series. We report on the first clinical trial on regular intraoperative breaks. For one time we turned our scientific curiosity to ourselves. This included the intraoperative collection of body fluids and required transparency which was not easy to obtain. It was rewarded with striking results: Regular intraoperative breaks lowered significantly the operators stress hormone levels, improved error-performance testing results and musculoskeletal fatigue scores. Subjectively the breaks enhanced the practitioners satisfaction. Surprisingly the operator's breaks were not at the cost of the patient: because the did not prolong the overall operation time at all and - in our setting- they significantly increased of cardiac output and urine production.