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NCT ID: NCT03921567 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Analgesic Drug Dependence

Intravenous Lidocaine for Perioperative and Postoperative Analgesia

Start date: April 15, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Postoperative pain continues to be untreated despite the application of multimodal analgesia, medication and new analgesic techniques. Traditional opioid pain treatment has many side effects, while invasive methods, such as epidural catheter, have high costs and difficulties during application. Lidocaine is a local anesthetic and its administration with intravenous routes has analgesic, antihyperalgic and antiinflammatory action. It increases the motility of the intestine and has antiemetic properties. The advantage of this method is the low cost of the preparation and its easy application. The intravenous administration of lidocaine for postoperative analgesia is recently used and not sufficiently researched technique .

NCT ID: NCT03849014 Completed - Hip Fractures Clinical Trials

Comparison of Biochemical Changes in Patients With Trochanteric Region Fracture Fixation With DHS Versus PFN

Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hip fractures are one of the most frequent fractures in older adults. There is still controversy which surgical strategy is the best option for treatment of hip fractures especially trochanteric region fractures. Surgical intervention that follows hip fracture induces biochemical, physiological and fibrinolytic changes that are so-called "second hit phenomenon" which trigger systemic inflammatory response syndrome. The investigators are aiming to study this phenomenon after two different surgical procedures and help surgeons in everyday practice to choose the most suitable surgical treatment for patients with trochanteric region fracture and give the scientific community more evidence which methods is better since there is still controversy.

NCT ID: NCT03652883 Completed - Clinical trials for Implementation as Usual

ImpleMentAll - Towards Evidence-based Tailored Implementation Strategies for eHealth

ImpleMentAll
Start date: June 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The ImpleMentAll (IMA) project aims to examine the effectiveness of tailored implementation compared to usual implementation of Internet-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (iCBT) for patients suffering from common mental disorders in routine practice. Common mental health disorders account for an alarming proportion of the global burden of disease. Being regarded as an evidence-based psychotherapeutic eHealth intervention, Internet- based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (iCBT), has the potential to answer to this societal challenge by providing an efficacious and efficient treatment from which more people can benefit. ImpleMentAll will develop, apply, and evaluate tailored implementation strategies in the context of on-going eHealth implementation initiatives in the EU and beyond. The objectives are: 1. To develop a generic Integrated Theory-based Framework for Intervention Tailoring Strategies (the ItFits-toolkit) for data-driven tailored implementation of evidence-based eHealth services. 2. To demonstrate the impact of the ItFits toolkit on the implementation of eHealth for common mental disorders. 3. To disseminate the validated toolkit in various healthcare contexts across Europe. Following a stepped-wedge trial design, the ItFits-toolkit will be introduced in twelve implementation sites in nine countries, and evaluated for its effectiveness in obtaining implementation success. An in-depth process evaluation using a realist evaluation methodology will provide information about the particularities of tailored implementation and the application of the ItFits-toolkit in real implementation work. The resulting ItFits-toolkit will enable data driven evaluation of eHealth implementation projects and its methods, materials, and strategies will provide concrete guidance on tuning implementation interventions to local determinant of practice across a variety of health care systems.

NCT ID: NCT02874963 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

FM-SRP and Tooth Extraction Improve Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Periodontitis

Start date: November 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This intervention study is designed to evaluate the effects of non-surgical procedure in addition to surgical procedure on systemic inflammation and glycemic control in with type 2 diabetes mellitus patients with periodontitis in comparison with non-diabetic periodontic patients.

NCT ID: NCT02709408 Completed - Clinical trials for Carbapenem Resistant Bacteria Infection

European Prospective Cohort Study on Enterobacteriaceae Showing Resistance to Carbapenems

EURECA
Start date: April 27, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Among antibiotic-resistant organisms, the Gram-negative bacteria are now the most important challenge because of the rapid worldwide spread of mechanisms conferring resistance to multiple drugs. The most recent and worrying problem is the emergence and spread of carbapenemases. Additionally, carbapenem-resistance is known to be very frequent among Acinetobacter baumannii isolates for many years. Overall, the therapeutic options available against carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) and A. baumannii (CRAB) are very limited. The best available treatment (BAT) against CRE is unknown, which is a challenge for therapeutic decisions and also for the design of randomized trials with new drugs. The generic objectives of EURECA are to obtain high-quality observational data to inform the design of randomized controlled trials for complicated intraabdominal infections, pneumonia, complicated urinary tract infections and bloodstream infections due to Carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) and carbapenem-resistant Acinetobater baumannii, and to provide cohort data that could eventually be used as historical controls for future comparisons with new drugs targeting CRE. This will be achieved by a prospective, multinational cohort study of patients with targeted infections due to CRE and CRAB, and by matched case-control-control studies.

NCT ID: NCT01878760 Completed - Children Clinical Trials

APRICOT: Anaesthesia PRactice In Children Observational Trial

APRICOT
Start date: March 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The aims of the APRICOT study are: - To establish the incidence of severe critical events in children undergoing anesthesia in Europe. - To describe the differences in paediatric anaesthesia practice throughout Europe. - To study the potential impact of this variability on the occurrence of severe critical events (Laryngospasm, Bronchospasm, Pulmonary aspiration, Drug error, Anaphylaxis, Cardiovascular instability, Neurological damage, Perianaesthetic cardiac arrest and postanaesthetic Stridor).

NCT ID: NCT01696578 Completed - Depression Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of Combined Intervention Approaches in the Treatment of Affective Disorders and Chronic Pain in War Victims

Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will measure the effects of biofeedback supported cognitive behavioral therapy (BF-CBT) and group physiotherapy intervention in victims of torture and massive violence in Kosovo. The investigators aim to restore physical and psychosocial functioning of the victims of torture and massive violence with available rehabilitation practice and integrate them into the community. It is also our objective to build local knowledge and expertise to apply measurement principles and CBT methods in the Balkan region.