View clinical trials related to Burn.
Filter by:Major surgery can result in blood loss that can require a blood transfusion during and/or after surgery. Tranexamic acid (TXA) is a medication that was first introduced in the 1960's as a treatment for heavy menstrual bleeding. Over the past 20 years, it has been used and studied in patients undergoing open-heart surgery, liver transplantation, and urologic surgery. Investigators believe tranexamic acid may possibly decrease bleeding related to major burn surgery, resulting in reduced blood loss, lower blood transfusion rates, and possibly decreased hospital costs related to your stay. In this study, prior to each surgical procedure to treat the participants burn injury, the participant will receive either the drug tranexamic acid or placebo. The placebo is a liquid that looks like the tranexamic acid medicine, but does not have any active ingredient in it. In this study, both the tranexamic acid and the placebo are considered research.
The proposed study will test the hypothesis that Propranolol, fenofibrate and fenofibrate plus propranolol have therapeutic, physiological, and metabolic effects that will improve clinical outcomes, and the long-term recovery, rehabilitation, and QOL in burned patients.
This is an interventional pilot study of 40 burn inpatients. Specific aims of the proposed pilot study are to use bedside blood analysis with rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) in severe burn patients to provide preliminary information on the nature of coagulation abnormalities and compare subject ROTEM coagulation profiles within 24 hours of burn injury (day 1) and on days 2, 3, 5, 7, 14 and 21 after burn injury.
To determine the safety and efficacy of administration of propranolol for reducing heart rate and blood pressure in burn injury.
This efficacy and safety trial will examine the effects and safety of propranolol administered to adult patients with severe burn injury. The investigators hypothesize that propranolol will provide significant benefit to adults following severe burn injury at doses that are safe and do not increase risk of adverse infectious and non-infectious outcomes.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the difference in joint range of motion of a new flexible hydrogel nanoparticle wound dressing compared to typical sodium carboxymethylcellulose dressing Aquacel AG for treatment of partial thickness burns.
The aim of the study is to compare results obtained with epidermal cell spray and classic skin grafting for epidermal replacement in acute burns
Determine effectiveness of various antimicrobial solutions on burn wounds (infections, wound healing, length of hospital stay).
Bone metabolism is adversely affected by severe burns in children for a period of time.
The investigators hope to learn if taking a nutrition drink for a short time after surgery for an elective reconstructive burn injury improves donor site healing, muscle mass and scar maturation time (the point at which the redness, height and firmness of the wound has faded, flattened and softened, and no longer changes in appearance).