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Severe Head Injury clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Severe Head Injury.

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NCT ID: NCT02442154 Completed - Severe Head Injury Clinical Trials

Early Tracheostomy Versus Standard of Care in Patients With Severe Head Injury

E-Trac
Start date: June 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Severe head injury is associated with airway compromise and poor respiratory effort. In Mulago Hospital intubation is the mainstay intervention and then patients are subjected to the wait and see strategy of delayed or no tracheostomy, very few undergo early tracheostomy, and some patients are left without an artificial airway.Using endotracheal tubes is associated with complications which have been shown to increase intensive care unit (ICU) and hospital stay, morbidity and mortality. Tracheostomy has been reported to have advantages over translaryngeal intubation but the optimal timing of tracheostomy in patients with severe head injury is controversial. Studies done elsewhere have showed that patients with severe head injury who undergo early tracheostomy have better survival outcomes but no studies have been done in our setting

NCT ID: NCT00152685 Recruiting - Severe Head Injury Clinical Trials

High Dose Hyperoncotic Serum Albumin for the Treatment of the Acute Phase of Severe Head Injury

Start date: n/a
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Experimentally high dose of hyperoncotic human serum albumin improve neurological recovery after head injury reduce cerebral edema and normalize apparent diffusion coefficient of water after ischemia reperfusion. The main hypothesis is that early administration of hyperoncotic serum albumin is able to reduce intracranial pressure for several days after severe head injury and thus reduce mortality and morbidity.