View clinical trials related to Hip Fractures.
Filter by:Fractures of the upper part of the femur may be treated with intramedullary nails. There are different designs to choose from. The intention of this RCT is to compare two nails with some of the same properties, but with different lengths. Usually, it is the surgeon who decides which nail to be used. The literature indicates that there is a lack of good evidence in the decision-making, and that the choice often depends on personal preferences and experience of the surgeon. Therefore, the investigators want to compare whether one of the nails has a better outcome than the other, and in that way be able to give some clearer guidelines for treatment. Patients will be randomized into two groups, one receiving a long nail and one receiving an extended-short nail and compare surgical and functional outcomes. Information from the operation and subsequent check-ups will be analysed. The hypothesis is that the extended-short nail can reduce operating time, bleeding, fluoroscopy time and give equal or better functional outcome, without increasing reoperation rates or mortality.
The objective of the present study is to assess whether specific cognitive intervention will influence rehabilitation outcomes of post-acute hip fracture patients.
The purpose of this study is to understand the trajectory of function and self-reported outcomes of patients following pelvic and acetabular, treated both operatively and nonoperatively.
The purpose of this study is to assess whether the Stryker© ADAPT™ augmented-reality platform can assist surgeons in optimizing placement of the lag screw component of the Stryker© Gamma™ cephalomedullary nail.
Our present study aims to initiate TXA administration immediately upon diagnosis of hip fracture in the Emergency Department. This will be a single blind randomized controlled trial comparing early administration of TXA in the ED in addition to perioperative dosing versus the standard perioperative administration only. The study population will include patients who have sustained a femoral neck, intertrochanteric, or subtrochanteric femur fracture and are undergoing surgical internal fixation or arthroplasty. We will prospectively compare the need for blood transfusion, total and hidden blood loss, postoperative complications, length of stay and readmission within 30 days.
This single-center open label study compares the outcomes of surgical repair of intratrochanteric fracture under general anesthetic or peripheral nerve blocks.
Hip fracture is one of the most frequently occurred injury in the elderly and usually requires surgical treatment. Malnutrition is common in elderly patients with hip fracture and is associated with worse outcomes. This study is designed to test the hypothesize that, in elderly patients with malnutrition or at risk of malnutrition and scheduled for hip-fracture surgery, perioperative nutritional intervention may reduce early complications and improve long-term survival.
The objective of this study is to compare the failure rate between two modes of fixing the lag screw of the cephalomedullary nail. The sample studied will be patients who have been diagnosed with a fragility intertrochanteric fracture. Investigators hypothesis is that the dynamic mode will have a lower failure rate compared to the static mode.
The study is going to be a single-centre prospective randomized trial. Patients will be randomly allocated to either control group (anesthetist-directed fluid therapy) or goal directed fluid therapy group, in which fluid therapy was guided by stoke volume (SV) algorithm with the use of Nexfin monitor. Primary outcome measures were the time to hospital discharge since surgery and the occurence of complications developed during the postoperative period. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of intraoperative hypotensive episodes (with MAP<65mmHg) in both groups and the requirement of vasoactive drugs to support blood pressure
The objective of this trial will be to establish whether the ultrasound-guided suprainguinal fascia iliaca compartment block is capable of protecting geriatric patients with hip fracture from delirium as compared to placebo