View clinical trials related to Acute Pulmonary Edema.
Filter by:This study aims to compare the clinical profile and outcomes of acute coronary syndrome patients with diabetes and without diabetes.
This study aims to evaluate the effect of statin for primary prevention, towards lowering the incidence of heart failure, acute lung edema, malignant arrhythmia and death in ACS patients.
EPICAL 2 (Epidemiology and prognostic of the Acute Heart Failure) is an epidemiological, observational, prospective and multicenter study. This study includes at first an exhaustive recording of the cases on a geographic area at East of France, then the recorded patients are followed up in a cohort at least 3 years. This study follows the experiences of the EPICAL study led by our team. Main objective: To describe the characteristics of the patients affected by acute heart failure and to identify prognostic factors, in particular related to care. More exactly : - To describe the sociodemographic, clinical, biological and therapeutic characteristics of the patients presenting an acute heart failure during hospitalisation and living at East of France ; - To study the short and medium-term morbi-mortality of these patients, and identify the main factors determining the prognosis for survival ; - To evaluate the prognostic impact of the intra and extra-hospital care ; - To identify the evolution of the care's practices of the decompensated heart failure since the EPICAL study (15 years) and their influence on the prognosis of the disease. Secondary objective: to constitute a biological collection of serum, plasma and urine of patients' sample presenting an acute heart failure.
Acute pulmonary edema (APE) is a common condition in the emergency room, associated with considerable mortality. The use of intravenous morphine in the treatment of APE remains controversial and Benzodiazepines have been suggested as an alternative for morphine to relieving dyspnoea and anxiety in the patients with APE. The MIdazolan versus MOrphine in APE trial (MIMO) is a multicenter, prospective, open-label, randomized study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of morphine in patients with APE.
The hypothesis of this observational single-center clinical study was to explore the volumetric hemodynamic monitoring in the perioperative period in major and risky thoracic intervention. The investigators monitored the changes in the volumes of blood in the central vessels and heart chambers as well as a volume of fluid in pulmonary tissue (i. e. extravascular lung water).