View clinical trials related to Vomiting.
Filter by:NETU-08-18 is a two-arm clinical study assessing efficacy and safety of a single oral dose of netupitant and palonosetron, two antiemetic drugs, versus oral palonosetron, both given with oral dexamethasone. The objective of the study is to demonstrate that netupitant and palonosetron are more effective than palonosetron alone, to prevent nausea and vomiting induced by moderately emetogenic cancer chemotherapy after administration of repeated cycles of chemotherapy.
The investigators hypothesize that in adult patients with diabetic gastroparesis with Type 1 diabetes (HbA1c ≤ 10.5%), daily tadalafil use will significantly improve gastric emptying compared to baseline as measured by gastric emptying time.
The primary objective is to test the hypothesis that the use of the Pressure Right device in combination with ondansetron and dexamethasone would result in a lower incidence of postoperative vomiting (emesis) than the combination of antiemetic therapy alone.
Evaluation of efficacy of APD421 in preventing nausea and vomiting caused by cisplatin
PONV after intrathecal morphine, occurs up to 30-40 percent. The patients having TKR normally are female, obese and non-smoker which are risk factors for PONV. Recently, a multimodal approach, combining several means to minimize PONV, has found wide acceptance as a standard of care. In our hospital, most of the patients are supposed to fast after midnight The oral rehydration therapy reduce patients thirst and increase his satisfaction, but whether or not this method can reduce the incidence of PONV after low dose (0.2 mg) intrathecal morphine is not investigated yet. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of preoperative oral rehydration therapy on the incidence of PONV.
This is a prospective, multicenter, open label, non-comparative trial in Spain. The primary objective of this study is to determine the complete response, defined as no vomiting and no use of rescue treatment, in women with early-stage breast cancer treated with one cycle of Docetaxel-Cyclophosphamide and active therapy for the prevention of CINV (Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting) day 1, 5-hydroxytryptamine 3 (5-HT3) antagonist plus 3 days of dexamethasone. A second step (efficacy phase) is designed to examine the efficacy and tolerability of aprepitant in the second cycle among patients who failed to the previous CINV prevention treatment. The study will focus on early-stage chemonaive breast cancer patients receiving docetaxel-cyclophosphamide and a 5-HT3 antagonist plus dexamethasone for the CINV prevention. The CINV incidence in those patients will be evaluated on the first cycle. All refractory patients, will be asked to participate in the second phase, where aprepitant on days 1, 2 and 3 will be added to their antiemetic regimen. Assuming a drop out of 5%, 212 patients will be included in the study. It is anticipated that around 48 patients will enter the efficacy phase. The duration of the study, from first patient visit to last patient visit will be approximately 21 months.
The majority of pediatric surgery takes place in an outpatient basis. The occurrence of postoperative vomiting can lead to a delay in hospital discharge. However, the use of postoperative vomiting prophylaxis exposes patients unnecessarily to the drugs side effects and also raises the final costs of the surgical procedure. The Objective our study is Compare the incidence of postoperative vomiting between children who received dexamethasone, dexamethasone plus ondansetron or placebo for anti-emetic prophylaxis during outpatient surgery. This is a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study to comparing the use of dexamethasone, dexamethasone plus ondansetron and placebo for postoperative vomiting prophylaxis in children submitted to general anesthesia. Data analysis will be used is Fisher's exact test for the categorical variables and the Anova test for numerical variables as they presented Gaussian variation. The study used a significance level of 5%.
Constipation following elective Caesarean sections (CS) is a common problem experienced by up to 50% of patients (1). The causes for this are multifactorial and include manipulation of the bowel during surgery, immobilisation and opiate based anaesthetic and analgesic techniques. To try to alleviate the problem of postoperative constipation, some anaesthetists prescribe postoperative lactulose in addition to postoperative analgesia, although no data exists that shows whether this has any beneficial effect on postoperative constipation. 1. Short term morbidity associated with Caesarean delivery. Hillan EM. Birth. 19 (4): 190-4).
The purpose of this study is to describe the safety and tolerability and pharmacokinetics of a single intravenous administration of the new, Sulfobutyl Ether-7-Beta-Cyclodextrin (Captisolâ„¢) based, formulation in Healthy Adult Subjects.
This clinical trial is studying how well granisetron, aprepitant, and dexamethasone work in preventing nausea and vomiting in patients receiving chemotherapy for stage II, stage III, or stage IV ovarian cancer. Granisetron patch, aprepitant and dexamethasone may help lessen or prevent nausea and vomiting in patients receiving chemotherapy for stage II, stage III, or stage IV ovarian cancer.