Clinical Trials Logo

Portal Vein Thrombosis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Portal Vein Thrombosis.

Filter by:
  • Terminated  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT01690715 Terminated - Clinical trials for Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Prognostic Value Related to the Presence of Thrombosis or Portal Vein Invasion in Patients With Hepatocellular Carcinoma Submitted to Surgery

HSL2012-06
Start date: July 2012
Phase:
Study type: Observational

A retrospective study based on analysis of medical records of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma treated at the Hospital Sírio-Libanês (Sao Paulo-Brazil) between 2001 and 2011 with diagnosis confirmed by imaging or histological specimen underwent surgical resection with curative intent. The study aims to determine the prognostic value of vascular complications related to cancer and to evaluate the survival rate of these patients, comparing the data with those reported in the literature.

NCT ID: NCT00769873 Terminated - Clinical trials for Portal Vein Thrombosis

Anticoagulation Post Laparoscopic Splenectomy

Start date: October 2006
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Splenic/portal vein thrombosis is an alarming complication of splenectomy. Retrospective studies in the literature have shown the incidence of symptomatic splenic/portal vein thrombosis to be between 0.7% (Rattner et al., 1993) to 8% (Winslow et al., 2002). This is a single-center, prospective, randomized study in subjects undergoing laparoscopic splenectomy. All participants will receive one dose of pre-operative low molecular weight heparin (Lovenox®) subcutaneously, 2 hours prior to surgery. Participants will be randomized pre-operatively to treatment or control group however the treatment allocation will not be revealed until the surgery is complete. Postoperatively, those assigned to the treatment group will receive 40 mg of Lovenox® subcutaneously once a day for 21 days; those in the control group will not. Patients with severe renal impairment will receive an adjusted dose of Lovenox® (30 mg subcutaneous dose daily). All patients will have a baseline abdominal Doppler ultrasound preoperatively and a second one done at 14 to 28 days post surgery to monitor for the presence of portal vein and/or splenic vein thrombosis. They will also have their lipase and liver function tests checked to correlate with the imaging findings.