View clinical trials related to Hemorrhage.
Filter by:This trial is conducted in Asia, Europe and Oceania. The aim of this trial is to evaluate the efficacy of placebo and activated recombinant human factor VII in patients having undergone allogeneic or autologous stem cell transplantation.
This trial is conducted in Europe. The aim of this trial is to demonstrate bio-equivalence between the marketed activated recombinant human factor VII (NovoSeven®) (CP-rFVIIa) and a new formulation stable at 25°C (VII25).
THE AIM OF THE this study is to assess the hemodynamic changes of uterine artery in patients with CIUD induced bleeding by using transvaginal color Doppler indices (uterine artery resistance index and pulsatility index) to prove the relationship between these changes and bleeding in these patient .
The rFVIIa (Novoseven) has been tested in traumatic hemorrhage but its efficiency has not been proven yet in this context. A national register has been set up in France identifying the patients which received rFVIIa. Those patients had persistent and active bleeding after severe trauma despite surgery and/or interventional radiology embolization. The aim of this present study is to report the first clinical results in those situations of patients treated with rFVIIa.
The purpose of this study is to confirm the superiority of Fibrocaps plus gelatin sponge, as compared to gelatin sponge alone, for achieving hemostasis. The investigational products were used in participants with mild to moderate surgical bleeding during spine, liver, vascular or soft tissue surgery, when control of mild to moderate bleeding by standard surgical techniques is ineffective and/or impractical.
HYBRID study is prospective randomized open label controlled multi center trial, to compare Hydrocoil and bare platinum coil for recanalization after endovascular treatment of intracranial aneurysms.
Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is a major cause of maternal death in the developing world. An important strategy in the prevention of deaths is the use of uterotonic drugs for PPH prophylaxis. Misoprostol has been recognized as an option for preventing PPH as it is economical, heat stable, has a long shelf-life, and can be taken orally. The investigators envisage that the use of self administered misoprostol after home births among mothers would be associated with a peri-partum fall in hemoglobin value of over 20% (the outcome of a fall of 2g/dl will also be tested in the pilot). The objective of the main study will be to assess the effectiveness and safety of antenatal administration of misoprostol tablets (600mcg) for self administration immediately following home delivery for the prevention of postpartum haemorrhage. The objectives of the pilot study are to test the integrity of the study protocol, to test the randomization procedure, to assess the acceptability of the intervention, to test the logistics of follow-up, to test the data collection forms, to validate the quality of life questionnaire in this population and to determine the recruitment rate to help study planning.
Misoprostol, a prostaglandin E1 that induces uterine contractions, has been proposed as a low cost, easy-to-use option for prevention and treatment of Postpartum Haemorrhage (PPH), especially in settings where injectable uterotonics are not yet available or feasible to use. A double-blinded individual randomized controlled study of misoprostol versus placebo in home deliveries in four districts in the Badakshan Province in Afghanistan. The study will recruit pregnant women who are likely to deliver at home. All women enrolled in the study will receive 600 mcg misoprostol to be self-administered as prophylaxis for PPH after delivery of their baby (ies) and before delivery of the placenta. Women who experience a PPH will be randomized to receive either: a) standard of care + 800 mcg misoprostol (four 200 mcg tablets) or b) standard of care + four placebo tablets resembling misoprostol. In this setting, standard of care is referral.
HEAT (Helicobacter Eradication Aspirin Trial) is a large simple double-blind placebo controlled outcomes study of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) eradication to prevent ulcer bleeding in aspirin users. It will be run by the University of Nottingham, with recruiting centres across the UK. This trial is funded by the National Institute of Health Research Health Technology Assessment (NIHR HTA) Programme. Aspirin use is widespread and increasing in elderly patients. The main hazard is gastrointestinal bleeding, which may be increasing because of increasing aspirin use. This trial is based on evidence that peptic ulcer bleeding in aspirin users occurs predominantly in H. pylori positive people. Patients will be identified by their GPs, then asked to attend an appointment with a Research Nurse to consent to the trial and take a H. pylori breath test. Those with a positive result will be randomised to receive a one week course of either eradication treatment or placebo. No follow-up visits are required, but instead information will be extracted from the patients' electronic medical record using the MiQuest search tool. The trial will continue until 87 adjudicated events (hospitalisation because of definite or probable peptic ulcer bleeding) have occurred, which would occur after a mean 2.5 patient years of follow-up, if trial assumptions are correct.
Present trial is one of two trials (the other being a trial in hepatic resection surgery also comparing TachoSil® and Surgicel® Original) targeted toward providing clinical safety and efficacy data to support a general hemostasis indication across several surgical procedures and organ systems in the USA. The patient will come for a screening and baseline visit, the day of surgery and follow up visits after 1 months, 3 months and 6 months. The enrollment period is planned for 16 months and 6 months of follow up.