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Wounds and Injuries clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03664713 Completed - Clinical trials for Psychological Trauma

EMDR in Psychiatric Inpatients With Severe Mental Disorder

Start date: February 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study of psychological trauma has become increasingly important in the field of mental health research due to the strong negative impact it has on the course and prognosis of psychiatric pathologies. However, from a clinical point of view it is still an overlooked and even ignored component. There is scientific evidence that treating traumatic events at outpatient hospital services in patients with severe mental disorder improves both trauma-related symptoms and clinical symptoms. A first-line treatment for psychological trauma is Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy. This therapy is recommended by the World Health Organization for treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and which has obtained promising first results in patients with severe mental disorder. This project proposes to test whether EMDR therapy in addition to standard treatment is more effective than standard treatment alone in psychiatric in-patients with severe mental disorder, in terms of reducing symptoms related to psychopathology and trauma, and in terms of improving functioning. Our first hypothesis is that EMDR will be more effective than standard treatment alone in reducing the severity of psychiatric symptoms. Our second hypothesis is that EMDR will be more effective than standard treatment alone in reducing the severity of trauma-related symptoms. Our third hypothesis is that EMDR will be more effective than standard treatment alone in improving functioning.

NCT ID: NCT03664362 Completed - Stress Clinical Trials

The BSHAPE Intervention Program for Safety and Health of Survivors of Cumulative Trauma

BSHAPE
Start date: October 10, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of the BSHAPE study is to test a trauma informed, culturally tailored, multicomponent program entitled BSHAPE (Being Safe, Healthy, And Positively Empowered) for immigrant survivors of cumulative trauma.

NCT ID: NCT03662997 Completed - Diabetic Foot Ulcer Clinical Trials

Clinical Study to Compare 3 Multi-Layered Foam Dressings for the Management of Chronic Wounds

Start date: March 19, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial (RCT) using a cross-over (repeated measures) design to evaluate safety and efficacy of three foam wound dressings in the local management of chronic wounds.

NCT ID: NCT03662308 Completed - Clinical trials for Spinal Cord Injuries

Heated Vest for Persons With Spinal Cord Injury

Start date: February 25, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Persons with higher levels of spinal cord injury (above the 2nd thoracic vertebrae; tetraplegia) are unable to maintain normal core body temperature (Tcore) when exposed to cool environments. In persons with tetraplegia, even limited exposure to cool temperatures may cause Tcore to approach hypothermic values and impair cognitive performance. Conversely, an increase in Tcore from subnormal to normal range may improve cognitive performance. Prior work has shown that cool seasonal temperatures have an adverse effect on personal comfort and the ability to perform vital daily activities of self-care in persons with tetraplegia. Interventions that address the vulnerability to hypothermia are limited. A self-regulating heated vest designed specifically for persons with tetraplegia is a novel and promising strategy to address this problem. By more effectively maintaining Tcore, the vest can decrease the adverse impact of cool temperatures on comfort, quality of life, and performance of vital daily tasks for Veterans with tetraplegia during the cooler seasons.

NCT ID: NCT03662243 Completed - Clinical trials for Acquired Brain Injury

Treatment for Reading and Writing Deficits Following Acquired Brain Injury

Start date: August 30, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Many people with acquired brain injuries have deficits in reading decoding, reading comprehension, and written expression. Alexia is a phenomenon in which a person who previously could read has trouble doing so after having sustained a brain injury; likewise, agraphia is an acquired writing problem affecting one or more aspects of written communication. Alexia and agraphia sometimes co-occur with one another and/or with other language challenges, but they can also occur as isolated phenomena. Methods to treat alexia and agraphia often focus on single intervention techniques that address aspects of reading or writing in isolation-such as matching written and spoken letters or letter sounds, performing choral reading, tracing letters, etc. Existing research suggests that the effectiveness of these techniques is limited. However, when used in combination, such techniques may promote improved reading and written communication skills. As such, the purpose of this research is to determine the extent to which a multicomponent intervention program improves the reading and writing capabilities of people with acquired alexia and/or agraphia.

NCT ID: NCT03660150 Completed - Clinical trials for Patients With Massive Burn Injury

Health-related Quality of Life After Massive Burn Injury

HR - QOL MR
Start date: June 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Massive burns are serious life-threatening conditions. Recent advances in their management now allow the survival of a growing number of patients. The burn care paradigm is transformed: the evaluation of survival at the end of acute care is no longer sufficient for a good evaluation of practices; the attention now focuses on long-term health-related quality of life (HR-QOL).The recently validated French translation of the burn specific health scale brief version makes this evaluation now feasible in French burn centers. The objectives of this study are to evaluate the HR-QOL of massive burn survivors, to compare it to another chronic condition (necrotizing fasciitis) and to determine the main predictive factor of health-related quality of life. This study is retrospectively conducted in 18 patients who survived a massive burn injury involving more than 80% of the total body surface area, or more than 70% of the total body surface area if the injury occured during childhood and who were treated between 1997 and 2017 in our Lyon burn center. Short Form-36 Medical Outcomes Survey (SF-36), and Brief Version of Burn Specific Health Scale (BSHS-B) are used for the present evaluation.

NCT ID: NCT03658278 Completed - Trauma Clinical Trials

Trauma Screening and Supplementation

Start date: March 15, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the proposed study is twofold: 1) The investigators will evaluate ultrasound imaging to screen trauma patients to identify patients at increased risk of postoperative complications associated with sarcopenia. 2) The investigators will evaluate a commercially-available oral nutritional supplement that has previously been evaluated in critically-ill intensive care patients and shown benefit for decreasing complications including decreased wound healing complications, decreased pressure ulcers, decreased skeletal muscle loss due to immobilization, and decreased one-year mortality.

NCT ID: NCT03657225 Completed - Acute Kidney Injury Clinical Trials

Mini Versus Conventional Cardiopulmonary Bypass In CABG in Asian Patients

MiniCPB
Start date: November 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Our intention is to perform a randomized controlled trial to compare the efficacy and safety of mini cardiopulmonary bypass system to a modified conventional bypass circuit in 80 Asian patients undergoing elective CABG. Our intend is to confirm the efficacy of mini-bypass in reducing haemodilution and reducing blood transfusions, and investigate if this is associated with reduced inflammation and better cardiovascular, neurological, renal, respiratory and infection outcome.

NCT ID: NCT03655158 Completed - Wound Heal Clinical Trials

The Effects of Ozone Therapy on Wound Healing

Start date: February 10, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

the aim of present study was to evaluate effects of ozone therapy on wound healing after gingivectomy and gingivoplasty operations as a model of secondary wound healing.. Twenty three systemically healthy individuals participated in this study. Ozone was applied immediately after surgery, at 1st day and 3rd day after gingivectomy surgery. In the photographs of the wounds, the difference in color were evaluated and measurements were performed at the baseline, 3rd, 7th, 14th days after surgery.

NCT ID: NCT03654495 Completed - ACL Injury Clinical Trials

Neuroplasticity Associated With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury

Start date: January 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Activation of the brain for knee movement changes after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. The brain activation profile after ACL reconstruction indicates a shift to a visual-motor control strategy, as opposed to a sensory-motor control strategy to control the knee movement. Recent research suggests that ACL reconstruction rehabilitation protocols should also consider neurocognition and its role in exercise, neuromuscular control, and injury risk to improve the effectiveness of the intervention. However, there is currently no evidence of the feasibility of neurocognitive exercise in a primary rehabilitation program that aims to restore movement function after ACL damage. The purpose of this study is to assess whether conventional ACL injury training with additional cognitive training based on virtual reality is as effective as the sole conventional ACL injury training in participants with ACL injuries.