View clinical trials related to Blood Coagulation.
Filter by:The current treatment of people with haemophilia and other bleeding deficiencies is largely based on clotting factor replacement therapy. The injections can be repeated several times a week according to a personalized schedule. To date, medications are exclusively dispensed in hospital pharmacies to ensure traceability and safety. This retrocession imposes accessibility constraints on patients and on their caregivers, increasing the burden of the disease, particularly in the organization of personal and professional daily life. The PHAREO study aims to investigate patients' perception of accessibility to anti-haemophilia drugs in relation to an evaluation of spatial accessibility in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region (France) in order to consider, if necessary, ways of improving the pathway for patients and their caregivers.
This is a prospective observational study of 100 patients undergoing liver transplantation at a single centre. Thrombin generation and kinetics will be assessed using a novel point-of-care device, and compared to conventional measures of hemostasis as well as viscoelastic tests to pinpoint specific coagulation deficits and identify potential therapeutic targets. The clinical course of patients will be followed for major bleeding and transfusion outcomes.
Sugammadex is new drug that is used for reversal of rocuronium induced muscle relaxation. benefits of reversal of neuromuscular blockade appears to be of great value in living donor liver transplant recipients. However, Few Clinical reports have investigated the anticoagulant effect of sugammadex. In this study, effects of sugammadex on bleeding profile of living donor liver transplantation will be investigated.
The goal of SOAR is to characterize the clinical and economic impact of clinicians' responses to major bleeding complications and pre-procedural concerns for bleeding risk in patients treated with oral anticoagulants (warfarin, anti-Xa orals, and anti-thrombin (IIa) orals) who present to the ED or in the hospital with acute illness or injury, with the eventual aim of informing the development of improved approaches to the management of OACs in the ED.
Oral anticoagulants vitamin K antagonists (VKA) have been used for many years in the treatment of thromboembolic disorders, which are among the most costly diseases in terms of public health resources. According to the Agence française de sécurité sanitaire des produits de santé (AFSSAPS), it was estimated at about 900,000 the number of patients treated with VKA in 2008 (more than 1% of the French population). VKA are at the origin of many adverse effects, given their narrow therapeutic window. They are the cause of the death of approximately 5000 patients per year. The use of this therapy is a priority axis of reflection for the Haute Autorité de Santé. The interregion G4 (Nord Pas de Calais, Normandy, Picardy), with more than 9 million people, is particularly affected by this problem. University hospitals of our interregion, given their very substantial regional referral activity, are actually involved in managing VKA adverse side effects. Elderly population constitutes the majority of prescriptions. The main objective of this study is to compare INR of people older than 75 years measured by traditional method with those measured by capillary method with INRatio2 supply. The secondary objective is to show that this measure is not affected by the presence or absence of anti-phospholipid antibodies, probably very prevalent in the elderly, as well as to test the variability of INR measurement between different hospital.
The aim of the study is to test if patients under oral anticoagulation therapy who are going to participate in the education program will have better Health-related quality of life, higher rate in pharmacological treatment adherence and better self efficacy to manage the treatment.
The objective of this study will be to assess the coagulation system in-vitro in a variety of bleeding and clotting disorders using the ROTEG analyzer and the thrombin generation assay.