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Major Non-cardiac Surgery clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Major Non-cardiac Surgery.

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NCT ID: NCT05090254 Completed - Oxygen Consumption Clinical Trials

The Effect of Perioperative Cardiac Output-guided GDT on Oxygen Delivery, Consumption, and Microcirculatory Perfusion

CUSTOM
Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Perioperative cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy (GDT) triggers fluid, vasopressor, and inotrope administration assuming that optimizing cardiac output (i.e., global blood flow) ensures adequate oxygen delivery and microcirculatory perfusion - that are usually not directly monitored during goal-directed therapy. There is increasing evidence that perioperative cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy may reduce postoperative complications compared to routine hemodynamic management in high-risk patients having major surgery. The effect of cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy algorithms on perioperative oxygen delivery and consumption as well as microcirculatory perfusion, however, is unknown. The investigators aim to investigate the effect of using different cardiac output-guided goal-directed therapy algorithms on perioperative oxygen delivery and consumption as well as sublingual microcirculatory perfusion compared to routine perioperative hemodynamic management in patients having major abdominal surgery with general anesthesia.

NCT ID: NCT03218553 Completed - Clinical trials for Major Non-cardiac Surgery

Effects of Perioperative Administration of Dexamethasone on Postoperative Complications and Mortality After Non-cardiac Major Surgery

PACMAN
Start date: December 13, 2017
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Postoperative complications are major healthcare problems and are associated with a reduced short-term and long-term survival after surgery. Major surgery is associated with a predictable and usually transient Systemic Inflammatory Response (SIRS), depending on the magnitude of the surgical trauma. An excessive SIRS syndrome participates to the development of postoperative organ dysfunction, infection and mortality. Corticosteroids may decrease the postsurgical SIRS in cardiac surgery: in a large multicenter randomized trial, a single intravenous administration of high-dose dexamethasone did not reduce the incidence of a composite endpoint of adverse events but was associated with a reduced incidence of postoperative pulmonary complications and infections and with a reduction in hospital stay. However, a similar study, recently published in the Lancet was negative. Evidences from one meta-analysis, including 11 studies of moderate quality (439 patients in total), suggest that intraoperative administration of corticosteroids during major abdominal surgery decreases postoperative complications, including infectious complications, without significant risk of anastomotic leakage. At present, no large randomized controlled trial has been performed in patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery. In acute medicine, several lines of evidence have shown that low to moderate doses of corticosteroids decrease the excessive inflammatory response, without inducing immuno suppression. However, despite the widespread use of corticosteroids to reduce postoperative nausea and vomiting and to improve analgesia, concerns continue to be raised about their safety, especially regarding an increased risk of postoperative infection. We hypothesize that the perioperative administration of glucocorticoids would reduce postoperative morbidity after major non-cardiac surgery through dampening of the inflammatory response. Given the number of surgical patients for whom the question applies, the study is of significant clinical importance

NCT ID: NCT01035541 Completed - Clinical trials for Major Non-cardiac Surgery

Goal Directed Hemodynamic Management and Renal Outcome After Major Non-cardiac Surgery

IROM
Start date: December 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This study is designed to compare renal outcome of patients following major non-cardiac surgery with different perioperative hemodynamic managements: a goal directed hemodynamic management group (using PiCCO) and a control group.

NCT ID: NCT00286572 Completed - Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trials

Long-term Mortality in Diabetics Undergoing Major Surgery

Start date: January 2004
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Patients with CAD and diabetes mellitus have a better prognosis than patients with CAD and no diabetes mellitus. In acute coronary syndrome patients with an insulin therapy had a better survival than patients with oral antidiabetics. But there is not known wether perioperative therapy with insulin or oral antidiabetics is associated with higher risk for higher perioperative cardiac morbidity and mortality and worse long-term survival.