View clinical trials related to Infections.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to assess the effectiveness of a single dose of preoperative antibiotic in reducing surgical site infections in certain dermatological procedures. Patients will undergo surgical excision or Mohs surgery as is clinically indicated and part of usual care. The study will be a double blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Patients meeting inclusion criteria will be assigned to one of three participant categories: 1) patients undergoing repair with skin flap or graft on the nose, 2) patients undergoing repair with skin graft, flap, or wedge resection on the ear, or 3) patients undergoing Mohs surgery with closure or partial closure or surgical excision on the lower extremity below the knee. Within each category, participants will be randomized into one of two groups: group one will receive a preoperative placebo pill and group two will receive preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis (either a single dose of Cephalexin 2g PO or single dose of Clindamycin hydrochloride 600 mg PO if allergy to penicillin or cephalosporin). Patients will followed for 30 days +/- 7 after surgery to evaluate for any surgical site infection.
CORONAVIT is an open-label, phase 3, randomised clinical trial testing whether implementation of a test-and-treat approach to correction of sub-optimal vitamin D status results in reduced risk and/or severity of COVID-19 and other acute respiratory infections.
The investigators hypothesize that detection of SARS-CoV2 on saliva samples will increase the performance of the screening program compared to the reference strategy (RT-PCR on a nasopharyngeal swab).
This study is to investigate the recent epidemiological trends and the treatment outcome in terms of the length of hospital stay, the relevant renal and neurological side effects, risk factors for developing these side effects, the selection of more resistant pathogens under therapy as well as the incidence of Clostridium difficile infections under treatment.
For this retrospective cohort study, medical records of patients treated between 2005 to 2019 with the UTN PROtect and/or ETN PROtect for tibia fractures or tibia revision cases will be examined. In comparison to this cohort, patients who received an uncoated tibia nail are examined as well. Demographics, pre-surgical health status, details on fracture type or on revision, treatment decision and surgery details, postoperative reoperation and revision, surgical site infections, time to union, and adverse events will be registered. In a subgroup, additional information including clinical outcomes and patient satisfaction will be assessed by clinical exam. Patients who still carry a nail and feel discomfort at the surgical site or present with a medical condition which demands an imaging will receive an x-ray of the tibia. The xray is not part of the standard study protocol.
The goal of this project is to help the state of Minnesota understand why individuals are not getting tested and potentially identify trusted individuals or organizations that could be used in follow-up work to send messages. Investigators focus on the first two issues of unit and item nonresponse, which is not random across the population and thus could lead to nonresponse bias. To do so, investigators are deploying flyers through 10 Twin City area food shelves and potentially through public housing units with information on how to answer an online questionnaire.
This is a phase I trial followed by a phase II randomized trial. The purpose of phase I study is the feasibility of treating patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) related to COVID-19 infection (COVID-19) with cord blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). The purpose of the phase II trial is to compare the effect of MSC with standard of care in these patients. MSCs are a type of stem cells that can be taken from umbilical cord blood and grown into many different cell types that can be used to treat cancer and other diseases. The MSCs being used for infusion in this trial are collected from healthy, unrelated donors and are stored and grown in a laboratory. Giving MSC infusions may help control the symptoms of COVID-19 related ARDS.
A nationwide, multicenter, randomized, non-inferiority trial of children with bone and joint infections. The primary objective is to determine if oral-only antibiotics (experimental arm) is non-inferior to initial intravenous antibiotics followed by oral therapy (control arm). Children will be randomized 1:1. The total treatment duration is identical in both groups. The study is open label with blinding of the primary endpoint assessor.
The primary objectives are to assess the antiviral activity, clinical safety and tolerability parameters of albuvirtide/3BNC117 combination therapy in reducing HIV-1 viral load during the 1-week induction period treatment period.
A Trial of GC4419 in Patients with Critical Illness due to COVID-19