View clinical trials related to Acute Lung Injury.
Filter by:The present study will utilize esophageal manometry to measure the presence and magnitude of persistent patient effort during lung protective ventilation, allowing identification and mitigation of occult lung stress.
Sepsis is a life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by the host's maladjusted response to infection. It is one of the common clinical critical diseases, often accompanied by multiple organ failure, immune imbalance and high mortality. Sepsis is a syndrome of physiological, pathological and biochemical abnormalities caused by infection. Its incidence rate and prevalence have been on the rise in the past few years. Sepsis has greatly endangered the lives and health of the public. Among them, ARDS is a fatal complication of sepsis and a common critical illness syndrome in ICU. At present, the conventional treatment for ARDS caused by sepsis is still limited to indirect supportive therapy such as primary disease treatment, infection control, mechanical ventilation support, and nutrition improvement, lacking specific direct treatment methods. So far, the drug treatment effect of ARDS at home and abroad is not satisfactory. Therefore, it has become an urgent task to find a new treatment strategy to alleviate ARDS. Neutrophil elastase inhibitors can reversibly and competitively inhibit the release of neutrophil elastase, inhibit the activation of neutrophils and the infiltration of inflammatory cells in the lungs, alleviate the release of inflammatory mediators, and thus improve respiratory function, which has a good protective effect on various experimental ARDS. However, the efficacy of neutrophil elastase inhibitor represented by sivelestat sodium in the treatment of ARDS has reached a relatively consistent positive conclusion in animal experiments, while the results of clinical studies are different. These differences in clinical research still need further analysis, research and verification in clinical trials. At present, the clinical studies of neutrophil elastase inhibitors in the treatment of sepsis induced ARDS are very few, and there is a lack of related prospective randomized controlled clinical studies. Therefore, further prospective clinical trials are needed to evaluate the therapeutic effect of neutrophil elastase inhibitors on sepsis induced ARDS patients. This study is intended to determine whether neutrophil elastase inhibitor can reduce the mechanical ventilation time, Murray lung injury score, ICU hospitalization time and 28-day mortality of septic ARDS patients compared with the control group through a single center randomized controlled trial, so as to provide a new basis for the treatment strategy of septic ARDS patients.
Platform adaptive embedded trial for acute respiratory distress syndrome (PETARDS) is a randomized, embedded, multifactorial, adaptive platform trial for ARDS. The study aimed to assess the impact of multiple interventions on outcomes in patients with ARDS admitted to the ICU.
This study aims to compare epidemiology, management of invasive ventilation and outcomes in critically ill patients with COVID-19 ARDS and ARDS from another pulmonary infection. The investigators will use individual patient data from four recently published large observational COVID-9 studies, including the 'Practice of VENTilation in COVID-19 patients' (PRoVENT-COVID) study, the 'Epidemiology of COVID-19 patients in the ICU' (EPICCoV) study, the 'SATI-COVID-19 - Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes of Patients With COVID-19 on Mechanical Ventilation in Argentina: a Prospective, Multicenter Cohort Study' and the CIBERESUCICOVID - Personalized Risk and Prognosis Factors and Follow-up at One Year of the Patients Hospitalized in the Spanish Intensive Care Units Infected with COVID -19' study. The investigators will use the individual patient data from ARDS patients with another pulmonary infection from the 'LUNG -SAFE - Large Observational Study to UNderstand the Global Impact of Severe Acute Respiratory FailurE' study and the 'ERICC - Epidemiology of Respiratory Insufficiency in Critical Care' study.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the potential usefulness of lung ultrasound to assess the size and perfusion of consolidation and explore their relationships with clinical outcome.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about neonatal acute respiratory distress syndrome in describe participant population. The main question it aims to answer is: using perinatal factors to predict early neonatal acute respiratory distress syndrome and reduce its mortality. Participants' umbilical cord blood will be collected for testing, but will not receive any intervention.
More than 2 million patients worldwide receive heart surgery every year, majority of these surgical patients will undergo cardiopulmonary bypass. However, the incidence of postoperative acute lung injury due to cardiopulmonary bypass is still as high as 20% to 35%. According to clinical experience, the earlier lung damage is detected, the more successful the treatment will be. On the basis of traditional detection, the investigators found a new indicator, serum soluble vascular endothelial-cadherin, which are easy to obtain and have certain specificity. Importantly, they can predict postoperative acute lung injury within 1 hour after cardiac surgery. It is meaningful that this indicator can provide clinicians with early decision-making advice and immediate treatment for patients who may be at risk.
The goal of this interventional clinical trial is to compare patients who undergo ECMO therapy for treatment of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and a randomized into one of two possible weaning strategy groups. Group 1: Weaning from ventilator occurs before ECMO weaning. Group 2: Weaning from ECMO occurs before weaning from ventilator. This study investigates which one of these strategies is more indulgent for the lung, and leads to less inflammation and therefore less potential side effects and an overall more favourable clinical course. As a primary criterion, measure of IL-6 in blood samples will beused. As secondary criterions, SOFA score at various time points, ventilation pressures, lung injury score (LIS), length of stay in the intensive care unit, and ventilator-associated pneumonia as well as levels of inflammatory cells and cytokines in both blood samples and bronchoalveolar lavage at different time points will be determined.
To compare the effect between mechanical ventilation strategy guided by transpulmonary pressure and tranditional lung protective ventilation strategy in acute respiratory distress syndrome for right ventricle protection.
Methamphetamine and amphetamine has various cardiovascular and central nervous system effects. Long-term use is associated with many adverse health effects including cardiomyopathy, hemorrhagic, and ischemic stroke. Death is usually caused by cardiovascular collapse and while amphetamine abuse has been considered as a potential cause of acute respiratory distress syndrome, the reports are usually anecdotal. This investigation considers reviewing individuals with few to zero medical conditions who develop acute respiratory distress syndrome and are methamphetamine positive