View clinical trials related to Renal Insufficiency.
Filter by:The study team aims to provide a food snack that is high in protein (30 g) for two weeks each month (6 treatments per patient per month) for 6 consecutive months, post-dialysis treatment, to in-center hemodialysis patients of all vintages and with all levels and types of comorbidities. The study team will compare changes in serum albumin during the intervention (6 months) using the patients' own serum albumin results that are collected for three months prior to and three months after the intervention. Additionally, the study team will determine participants' dietary habits and appetite pre-, during and post-intervention.
To evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetic characteristics of pirfenidone capsules in chronic kidney disease G2 and G3a patients, and to provide a basis for the phase II clinical trial program
Hemodialysis (HD) is an important and commonly used renal replacement therapy (RRT) for End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) patients worldwide. Inadequate HD, impaired exercise capacity and declined peripheral muscular strength resulted by HD and ESRD are still disturbing problems, which also predicts poor renal prognosis and poor quality of life. The results of systematic reviews by the investigators have shown that aerobic exercise and combined exercise can improve dialysis efficacy (alleviate uremia symptoms), improve aerobic exercise capacity and muscle strength, and improve patients' quality of life, which also supports the notion that the National Kidney Foundation Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (K/DOQI) recommends exercise as cornerstone of ESRD rehabilitation. Therefore, this study used the effective exercise type of the systematic review results - combined exercise as an intervention method to observe its effects on dialysis efficacy, blood pressure, aerobic exercise capacity, muscle strength and quality of life. The study hypothesized that combined exercise can not only improve dialysis efficacy, but also has an interaction effect with intervention duration, which deserves researches' attention. Combined exercise will also improve blood pressure (including systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure) in patients with ESRD and reduce the symptoms of renal hypertension. It will also improve the exercise capacity and muscle strength of ESRD patients and improve their quality of life.
Despite its known prevalence, a recent study conducted with Prof. Cacoub (unpublished) on the national health insurance database showed that iron deficiency was a poorly diagnosed and poorly treated comorbidity. In patients with Chronic Kidney Disease but Non-Dialysis, the determination of Ferritinemia and Transferrin Saturation Factoris performed in only 30% and 10% of cases whereas they should be performed routinely in inflammatory situations and in case of anemia (HAS 2011, KDIGO 2012). The objective of this study is to obtain updated data on the prevalence of iron deficiency in France in patients with CKD-ND, applying the international recommendations and those of the French Health High Authority (determination of ferritinemia and Transferrin Saturation Factor).
The overall objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and diagnostic efficacy of Mangoral in liver MRI in participants with known or suspected focal liver lesions and severe renal impairment. The diagnostic efficacy of Mangoral will be assessed in terms of visualization of detected focal liver lesions in combined MRI (CMRI: combined Mangoral-enhanced and unenhanced MRI) compared to unenhanced MRI.
The safety and efficacy of micro-energy ultrasound in the treatment of renal insufficiency after renal transplantation.
Disparities in palliative care for patients with serious illness exist because of gaps in knowledge around patient centered psychological, social, and spiritual palliative care interventions. Patient-centered palliative care communication interventions must be informed by the perspectives of patients who are living each day with their serious illness. Yet, there is a lack of research about how to efficiently and effectively integrate the patient's narrative into the electronic health record (EHR). The central hypothesis of this proposal is that the implementation of a patient-centered narrative intervention with patients with serious illness will result in improved patient-nurse communication and improved patient psychosocial and spiritual well-being.
The objectives are to better understand, in the dialysis patient, the relationships between microvascular morphometry and cardiovascular events, survival, arterial hypertension, the pathology responsible for renal failure, the age of dialysis and metabolic parameters. The investigator team also want to better understand the relationship between the diameter of small arteries and parameters such as hypertension, the pathology that causes kidney failure, the age of dialysis, the use of VKA or EPO, metabolic parameters (HbA1c, NFS, reticulocytes, BNP, lipid balance, phosphocalcic balance).
Approximately 50% of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) develop acute kidney injury (AKI) and more than 10% need dialysis. There is no treatment for AKI. Care is aiming for optimization of circulation and blood flow to the kidneys and avoiding nephrotoxic agents. There is conflicting data concerning whether early or late dialysis is harmful for the kidneys. No one has examined the physiological changes in the kidney when starting dialysis and which blood pressure that leads to most optimal physiological conditions for the kidneys during dialysis. In this descriptive study of 20 ICU patients suffering from AKI we aim to investigate renal physiology when starting continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) and also at different target blood pressures using retrograde renal vein thermodilution technique. In parallel we will also investigate and validate this invasive method with contrast enhanced ultrasound of the kidneys.
Study Type and Design Prospective, Observational Study Rivaroxaban in Elderly AF patients with or without renal impairment in Korea This study will investigate effectiveness and safety in elderly patients, the result from well-designed and high-quality prospective clinical registry collected through real-world clinical practice is expected to resolve current medical unmet needs of rivaroxaban in Korean elderly patients. Primary Study Objective(s) To investigate the effectiveness of rivaroxaban in elderly patients with NVAF, with or without renal impairment in Korea real-world clinical practice settings Secondary Study Objective(s) To see safety outcome including major bleeding, clinically non-major bleeding, all-cause mortality rivaroxaban in subgroup based on risk factor(eg. Renal impairment) physicians' treatment pattern in rivaroxaban