View clinical trials related to Hemorrhage.
Filter by:Objectives: To investigate the impact of NIRS directed optimal cerebral perfusion pressure on the outcome of aSAH patients. Study design: A multicenter, single-blinded, randomized controlled trial. Setting: Departments of critical care medicine of tertiary hospitals in China. Patients: 150 aSAH patients (≥ 18 years old) who admitted to ICU (predicted ICU duration time ≥ 24 hours) Intervention: Patients with aSAH will be randomly divided into the control group and the intervention group. The control group will follow the SAH guidelines. The intervention group will be given continuous NIRS and invasive blood pressure monitoring at same time. The correlation curve between the brain oxygenation index or the brain hemoglobin index (ORI/THx) and the blood pressure will be obtained through continuous monitoring. According to the correlation curve, the optimal blood pressure will be determined which provides the optimal CPP. Then the goal of blood pressure (within 5 mmHg of CPPopt) will be maintained as the target of blood pressure management for the intervention group during ICU stay. Primary outcome: Neurological prognosis (GCS score,GOS score, and NIHSS score when discharge from ICU; GOS score at 6 months), etc. Predicted duration of the study: 2 years.
The length of prophylactic antibiotic use with antibiotic impregnated External Ventricular Drains (EVD)s is unknown. This study is a randomized clinical trial with two arms: 1. twenty four hours of prophylactic antibiotic use or 2. prophylactic antibiotic use for entire duration of EVD
Dr. Purdy has developed a novel bronchial blocker device that has multiple applications. In this project, a simulation model of massive pulmonary hemorrhage in an adolescent intubating manikin will be used to compare the novel method against 3 published methods of lung isolation.
A Prospective Randomized Open-Label Blinded Endpoint (PROBE) Pilot Trial of restarting antiplatelet therapy at 1 week versus 3 weeks after traumatic intracranial hemorrhage with a primary composite endpoint of major bleeding and vascular occlusive events.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the association between hemoglobin levels in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF-Hb) and the occurrence of secondary brain injury in patients after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH-SBI) during the first 14 days after bleeding.
The RUBY Study is a multicenter, observational, post-market registry designed to collect observational data on patients treated with the Jada System in the post-market setting.
With the help of a standardized questionnaire, an increased risk of bleeding due to pre-existing hemostasis disorders in the site-specific patient population will be detected and the corresponding enhanced diagnostic measures will be initiated. The planned prospective observational study should i.) systematically investigate the results of this procedure and ii.) allow a comparison with a retrospective perioperative cohort that was cared for at the Benjamin Franklin Campus before the introduction of the questionnaire. Due to the campus structure with a large vascular surgery center as well as a large urological, general and trauma surgery department, a high number of multimorbid patients with pre-existing disorders of primary hemostasis, mainly caused by medication or secondary diseases, is to be expected. In the following, the feasibility of the required measures in clinical routine (measured by the frequency of actual changes or modifications of the initially planned perioperative procedure, the adequate implementation of indicated diagnostic measures, etc.) will be examined.
The purpose of the present study is to compare the effectiveness and safety of two surgery evacuation methods (endoscopic surgery and suboccipital craniotomy) in the treatment of acute spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage (SCH). A multi-center randomized control trial will be conducted. Patients with an initial GCS score of 5-14 will be screened and enrolled in the first 24 hours after SCH.
Researchers are looking to learn more about future menstrual bleeding in women who have started using intrauterine contraception methods. "Intrauterine contraception" means that a device is inserted into a woman's uterus by her doctor. The device then releases a birth control treatment into the uterus. Researchers have found that when women use intrauterine contraception, its effects on the menstrual cycle can cause changes to how often and for how long women will bleed. This is one of reasons women may stop using their intrauterine contraception. So, the researchers in this study wanted to learn about a tool that can be used to predict future bleeding events. This tool was developed based on the results of previous clinical studies that researched menstrual bleeding. This tool is a smartphone application called MyIUS. This study will include about 3,000 women who have recently had intrauterine contraception inserted and who use the MyIUS app. There will be no visits with a study doctor in this study. After the intrauterine contraception has been inserted, the women will start to record any events of bleeding in the MyIUS app. After they have recorded events of bleeding for a total of 90 days, the MyIUS app will give a prediction of menstrual bleeding expected for the next 180 days. The women who sign the electronic informed consent form will continue to record their bleeding events for a total of 6 months. The researchers will then collect this information. They will use this information to find out how well the MyIUS app can predict future menstrual bleeding.
In vitro platelet function and post-transfusion platelet recovery of platelets stored in whole blood decline during storage. In this pilot randomized clinical trial we aim to investigate the impact of storage time of whole blood on the effect and safety in treatment of immediate blood loss in patients undergoing complex cardiothoracic surgery. The study is designed as an exploratory superiority study to support feasibility and provide critical guidance for future, more definitive randomized trials. In the study the test group will receive CPD whole blood leukocyte-depleted with a platelet-sparing filter and stored for 15-21 days whereas the control group patients will receive leukocyte-depleted CPD whole blood stored for less than 7 days.