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Respiratory Insufficiency clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01857674 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Respiratory Failure Requiring Reintubation

Evaluation of Laryngeal Ultrasonography Performance in Predicting Major Post Extubation Laryngeal Edema in Intensive Care Patients

ECHOLPE
Start date: May 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

- For patient in intensive care unit, extubation failure is defined as the necessity of early reintubation after scheduled extubation, with Increased morbidity and mortality, so it seems important to quickly identify patients with high risk of post-extubation acute respiratory failure. - Major post-extubation laryngeal edema is one of extubation failure causes, and its incidence vary in literature from 4 to 37%. - We can't currently predict arising of a major post-extubation laryngeal edema. However, a recent pilot study showed that laryngeal ultrasonography could help to identify patients with high risk of post-extubation stridor, measuring ultrasonic leak volume and cuff-deflated air-column width, of which we propose to assess diagnostic performance.

NCT ID: NCT01857635 Completed - Clinical trials for Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure

Use of TpCO2 (Transcutaneous CO2 Measurement) as PaCO2 Predictor During NIV in Case of Acute Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure

TpCO2-NIV
Start date: February 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

In patients suffering from hypercapnic respiratory failure and treated by non invasive ventilation (NIV), the interest of using transcutaneous CO2 measurement to evaluate PaCO2 and PaCO2 variation over time is unknown and will be evaluated in this study. Measurements will be done during one-hour NIV treatments.

NCT ID: NCT01855815 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Hypercapnic Respiratory Failure

Hemolung RAS Registry Program

Start date: April 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The purpose of the Hemolung RAS Registry Program is to collect retrospective, de-identified, standard of care data following the commercial use of the Hemolung RAS.

NCT ID: NCT01843933 Completed - Clinical trials for Respiratory Depression

Detecting Post-Operative Respiratory Depression in Children

Start date: June 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Due to the lingering effects of general anesthesia and the administration of medications for pain after surgery, children in the recovery room are at risk for breathing problems. While there are less data specific to children, in general 25% of patients in the recovery room experience complications from anesthesia. The most common complications involve the patient's airway and their ability to breath adequately. Currently, checks of oxygenation with a pulse oximetry monitor and of respiration through nursing assessments are used to detect breathing problems. However, these are believed not to be adequate for reliably recognizing significant respiratory depression until other dangerous events develop such as the cessation of breathing, severe drops in oxygen levels, or cardiac arrest. Capnography is a monitoring device that measures the amount of carbon dioxide being exhaled and assesses the adequacy of respiration. A small plastic cannula sits at the base of the nose and on the lip to continuously monitor the patient's breathing. Most children tolerate this device well and staff consider it easy to use. While capnography is routinely used in the operating room to monitor breathing, it is not used during post-operative care when patients are still at risk of breathing problems. Objectives: To determine if capnography can detect problems with breathing faster and more often than traditional monitors. To determine if the addition of capnography to routine monitoring will decrease the numbers of additional adverse events that occur in children undergoing post-operative care by allowing nurses to intervene in care faster and more frequently. Methods: In the first phase of this study, the investigators will apply the capnography monitor to children in the recover room and determine how often they experience breathing difficulties measured by this device. In the second phase, the investigators will educate staff on the use of capnography and what values are considered abnormal. Children will again have the capnography cannula placed on them as they enter the recovery room. They will then be divided into two groups - in one group the nurses in the recovery room will have access to the capnography monitor for their patients, whereas in the other group the nurses will not be able to see the readout from the monitor. The investigators will determine if children have fewer breathing problems and less additional adverse events when nurses use capnography in addition to the routine monitors already in place in the recovery room as compared to when nurses use standard monitoring alone. Potential Impact: If capnography can detect breathing problems prior to being identified by current monitoring devices, staff may be able to intervene more quickly and before more serious events occur in the children receiving post-operative care. This can reduce adverse events, improve patient safety, and avert harm in children. The adoption of this device for routine monitoring of post-operative care has the potential to save lives.

NCT ID: NCT01838733 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

Cerebral Oximetry and Perioperative Outcome in Non-Cardiac Surgery

Start date: April 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Cerebral desaturations occur frequently in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery. The definition of what constitutes a cerebral desaturation, the incidence of the phenomenon, the association between desaturations and perioperative outcome, and the mechanistic explanations of cerebral desaturations remain unexamined. This study seeks to identify the true incidence and magnitude of cerebral desaturations in high-risk non-cardiac surgical patients and the association between desaturations and perioperative outcome. The investigators will attempt to determine the following (1) The proper definition, incidence and severity of decreased cerebral saturation (rSO2) in high-risk non-cardiac surgical patients (2) the mechanisms surrounding decreases in rSO2 by correlating it with alterations in physiologic parameters (such as blood pressure, cardiac output, hemoglobin concentration, and carbon dioxide levels) and (3) to correlate the incidence and severity of decreased rSO2 with relevant perioperative. The investigators will also analyze a panel of inflammatory biomarkers to determine if these biomarkers have the ability to predict postoperative complications. The investigators will study 200 high-risk patients undergoing high-risk non-cardiac surgery. The investigators will determine the incidence and severity of decreases in rSO2, the associated factors with the occurrence of decreased rSO2, and the relationship between decreases in rSO2 and adverse perioperative outcome with a composite of well defined perioperative complications such as death, myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular accident, acute kidney injury, delirium, postoperative infections, and the need for mechanical ventilation.

NCT ID: NCT01838343 Completed - Respiratory Failure Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Ultrasound to Guide Management During a Rapid Response Event

Start date: March 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Rapid response team systems have been implemented in numerous hospitals throughout the world with the goal of improving the identification and safety of hospitalized patients who are clinically deteriorating. Despite their theoretical benefit, rapid response systems have not been proven in the medical literature to ultimately change outcomes. The traditional physical exam is helpful in evaluating and treating unstable medical patients during these types of events but has significant limitations of deceased sensitivity and specificity of findings. Ultrasound is a known tool for more accurately assessing patients in shock and respiratory failure in the ICU by highly trained operators but to the investigators knowledge has not been studied in the setting of rapid response events on hospital wards by critical care fellows after focused training. The investigators aim to assess the impact of ultrasound performed by critical care fellows during rapid response events.

NCT ID: NCT01828151 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Respiratory Failure

Noninvasive Positive Airway Pressure Ventilation and Risk of Facial Pressure Ulcers

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

To assess risk of skin pressure lesions in patients treated with noninvasive mechanical ventilation.

NCT ID: NCT01824160 Completed - Tetralogy of Fallot Clinical Trials

Pulmonary Artery Repair With Covered Stents

PARCS
Start date: December 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The Covered Cheatham-Platinum Stent (CCPS) is being study for repair of tears that occur in the pulmonary artery during dilation (enlargement) of a conduit (passageway) connecting the right ventricle of the heart to the pulmonary arteries. Patients undergoing replacement of their pulmonary valve by transcatheter technique Melody Valve) are at risk of developing such tears in the process of preparing the conduit to accept the new valve. In order to implant such a valve, the connection between the right ventricle and the pulmonary arteries often needs to be enlarged. High pressure balloons may be needed and these balloons can sometimes cause tears in or even rupture of the connecting conduit. Such tears can allow blood to flow into the chest and rarely this can lead to a life-threatening emergency. Experience suggests that such tears can be closed by implanting into the conduit a metallic stent with an outer covering, rebuilding the wall and allowing continuation of the valve implant.

NCT ID: NCT01820507 Terminated - Respiratory Failure Clinical Trials

Extubation Failure Prevention in High Risk Patients by High-flow Conditioned Oxygen Therapy vs. Standard Oxygen Therapy

Start date: March 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Failure of extubation after mechanical ventilation is a frequent and deleterious issue. Main reasons for failure are hypoxemia, secretions retention, lung collapse and excessive work of breathing. Most of this issues can be partly counterbalanced by a device named "High flow conditioned oxygen therapy (HFCO)". Then, our hypothesis is that HFCO may reduce the incidence of respiratory failure after extubation in patients with high risk for failure.

NCT ID: NCT01819090 Completed - Respiratory Failure Clinical Trials

Optimizing Communication During Ventilation

PHONOVNI
Start date: November 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Mechanical ventilation is one of the only treatment that has improved survival of patients with neuromuscular respiratory failure. As disease progresses, some patients may require longer ventilation period. Non invasive mechanical ventilation is the preferred method of ventilation but it may interfere with speech and communication of patients who require ventilation throughout the day. The investigators are evaluating the effect on speech and communication of a ventilation device which allows patients to momentarily and voluntarily withhold ventilation if they want to speak. This should allow the patients to have a more fluid speech.