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Post-Op Complication clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04117568 Terminated - Sepsis Clinical Trials

The Role of Emergency Neutrophils and Glycans in Postoperative and Septic Patients

Start date: September 4, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Surgical trauma elicits an immune response aiming to initiate healing and remove debris and damaged tissue locally at the wound site (1). This local reaction includes a considerable production of cytokines and chemokines that enters the circulation and initiate a systemic inflammatory response mediated by circulating cytokines and chemokines. This response is called systemic inflammatory immune response (SIRS) and is an aseptic systemic inflammation. Postoperative inflammation produces proinflammatory cytokines, mainly IL-6, IL1 beta, and tumor necrosis factor alfa (2). Neutrophils and emergency granulopoesis Polymorphonuclear neutrophils constitute the most abundant population of white blood cells. Their main task is to provide innate immune protection of the host from microbial attack, migrating to the site of infection, engulfing the microbes by phagocytosis, and killing the prey through attack by reactive oxygen species (ROS) and antimicrobial granule pro¬teins (22). Upon systemic infection or inflammation, e.g., sepsis or trauma, the bone marrow enters a state of emergency granulopoiesis, drenched in cytokines that augment production and survival of neutrophils for rapid delivery to the blood (23-25). Recently, advanced techniques have evolved that al¬low the isolation of different developmental stages of steady-state and emergency neutrophils, and characterization of these has just begun (26). Glycans Glycans (polysaccharides) attached to proteins and lipids on the surfaces on immune cells serve as ligands for glycan-binding proteins, lectins. Several neutrophil processes are directed by gly¬can - lectin interactions; selectin-directed rolling on the endothelium, siglec-mediated in¬hibitory signals, and activation of effector function by galectins. Many of the proteins that end up in neutrophil intra-cellular granules are highly glycosylated, but not much is known about if and how the neutrophil glycome evolves during the 'targeting-by-timing' process of differentiation and how this is affected by emergency granulopoiesis during systemic infection and inflammation. Here is a clear knowledge gap.

NCT ID: NCT03186157 Terminated - Stroke Clinical Trials

Prevalence of Trephined Syndrome After Decompressive Craniectomy

TS
Start date: January 16, 2012
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Decompressive craniectomy is frequently used to treat increased intracranial pressure or an intracranial mass effect. Trephined Syndrome describes a neurological deterioration, which is attributed to a large craniectomy. The symptomatology is varied but includes headache, aggravation of a hemisyndrome or cognitive disorders, often has an orthostatic component and improves or disappears with cranioplasty. The incidence of Trephined Syndrome has been reported between 7% and 26%. However, it might be underestimated if the course of cognitive functions before and after cranioplasty were insufficiently documented.