View clinical trials related to Bleeding.
Filter by:Tranexamic acid has been shown to be effective in reducing blood loss and transfusion in orthopedic surgery. It remains unknown the ideal therapeutic regimen. The goal of this study is to compare 3 dosage regimen of tranexamic acid in patients submitted to major orthopedic surgery.
The optimal antithrombotic therapy for patients requiring anticoagulation after coronary stenting is unknown. Double platelets suppressive agents combined with oral anticoagulation (triple antithrombotic therapy) remains the Gold standard. Our study aims at studying bleeding events occurring until 6 months after the initiation of triple antithrombotic therapy.
Terlipressin is the mainstay drug for the treatment of acute variceal bleeding in liver cirrhosis. According to the drug instructions, intravenous bolus infusion is the standard approach of terlipressin. It remains unclear about whether or not continuous infusion of terlipressin should be considered.
High dose heparin regimens are required in cardiac surgery under cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) and this may increase postoperative bleeding. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of heparin dose calculated according to lean body weight on intraoperative and postoperative bleeding.
Studies have shown that tranexamic acid reduces blood loss and transfusion need in patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty. However, no to date, no study has been large enough to determine definitively whether the drug is safe and effective. The present study was designed to verify noninferior efficacy and safety of topical intra-articular TXA compared with intravenous TXA in primary THA.
The purpose of the study is to examine how well three months preceding use of Cerazette progestin only pill predicts the bleeding pattern during following Nexplanon implant use.
The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility, safety and effectiveness of an endotracheal tube embedded with a mini video-camera as a guiding tool for percutaneous tracheostomy.
The purpose of this study is to compare the feasibility, safety, efficacy and ease of performance of a video-assisted PCT (via an endotracheal tube embedded with a mini video-camera) with the standard ("blind") PCT technique.