View clinical trials related to Postpartum Hemorrhage.
Filter by:Postpartum haemorrhage (PPH) remains a leading cause of maternal mortality, despite treatment with conventional methods. Uncontrolled reports and three small randomised controlled trials have suggested that misoprostol may have an additive effect to routine treatment, and there is a serious danger that this method will be used widely without research to document the effectiveness or risks of this method. In this randomised controlled trial (RCT), we propose to test whether 600 μg of sublingually administered misoprostol in women requiring additional uterotonics after delivery, and after routine syntocinon to all women during or after delivery, has additional effects above the additional conventional uterotonics in reducing PPH. Women with measured blood loss greater than or equal to 500 mls in 4 Karachi hospitals who give consent will be given locally routine treatment for PPH. In addition, they will be enrolled by drawing the next of a series of randomised treatment packs containing misoprostol or placebo. The primary outcome measure will be blood loss greater than or equal to 500 mls after enrolment.
The purpose of this study is to test whether misoprostol is as effective as oxytocin for treating primary postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) with uterine atony as the suspected cause in two circumstances: 1) where women have received prophylactic uterotonics in the third stage of labor; and 2) where no prophylactic uterotonics have been given in the third stage of labor.
Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) ranks among the leading causes of maternal morbidity and mortality, both in developed and developing countries. With this trial, we sought to determine the effectiveness of oral misoprostol as an uterotonic drug in comparison with intravenous oxytocin, in patients with a low risk of PPH undergoing non-scheduled Cesarean section. We therefore compared the intra- and postoperative blood loss, as well as drug related side effects in patients, treated by the same surgical and anesthesiological team in one institution.
Death rates for pregnant women in rural India are approximately forty-five times higher than in the United States. Bleeding after the birth of a child and underlying anemia are the primary causes of mothers' deaths and sickness in rural India. This study assesses the effectiveness of an oral drug, misoprostol, given in the late stage of labor to reduce the incidence of maternal bleeding following births assisted by midwives in selected sites in Belgaum District, Karnataka, India.