View clinical trials related to Cardiac Surgery.
Filter by:AUDICS-ICU is a prospective observational aiming to evaluate the prevalence of auditive dysfunction following cardiac surgery. Participants will undergo audiometric testings before and 3 months after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. Furthermore, the study evaluates hearing loss-associated ICU-acquired delirium after cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass.
Preoperative anemia, bleeding and transfusions have been recognized as a "Deadly triad" in cardiac surgery associated with an increased morbidity,mortality, and costs related. Thus strategies to reduce unnecessary RBC transfusions and to optimize preoperative anemia must be developed .The study evaluate an individual blood conservation strategy based on patient blood management bundles in cardiac surgery patients: optimisation perioperative hemoglobin level by erythropoietin and ferric carboxymaltose (Ferinject) associated with the use of ScV02 to guide perioperative erythrocyte transfusion.
This study will investigate the potential of guiding remifentanil analgesia during cardiac and vascular surgery in moderate to high risk patients requiring general anesthesia.
The purpose of this registry is to obtain perioperative data in patients undergoing cardiac or thoracic aortic surgery and find out relations between the data and investigate several causes affecting postoperative complications.
During surgery high concentrations of supplementary oxygen are routinely administrated. However, there is increasing evidence of potential harm with liberal oxygen therapy. The hypothesis of the present study is that oxygen therapy adjusted to a normal arterial oxygen target is feasible and will attenuate the side effects of supplementary oxygen therapy. The study design is a before-and-after study in which 25 patients will follow the standard regime with high concentrations of oxygen therapy and 25 patients will be treated with oxygen to achieve a normal value of arterial oxygenation.
The investigators aim to evaluate the roles of α7nAchR in the mechanisms of dexmedetomidine in improving delirium after cardiac surgery. The results of this study would lay the foundation for revealing the mechanisms of dexmedetomidine improving delirium after cardiac surgery and provide a new idea to the early treatment of delirium.
This is a national registry study to determine the serumal biomarkers for prognosis of adverse events in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting.
Over the past few years, research has focused on the prevention of atrial fibrillation (AF) after cardiac surgery, but highly effective interventions are still missing. Postoperative AF remains the most common complication after cardiac surgery, with an incidence of 10 to 50%. This complication is usually a transient condition that resolves spontaneously but it has major adverse consequences for patients and the health care system, including increased rates of death, complications (strokes), and hospitalisations with inflated costs. Recently, animal studies have demonstrated that neurotoxins such as botulinum toxin (BTX) injected into fat pads could suppress AF inducibility by parasympathetic activation. Botulinum toxin injection in fat pads has been studied in the dog's heart and could be associated with the reduction of atrial fibrillation in postoperative cardiac surgery. One pilot study has demonstrated the feasibility and safety of this technique in the human heart. The investigators hypothesize that botulinum toxin injection may substantially reduce postoperative AF during the first postoperative month after cardiac surgery without any serious adverse events. By the suppression of ganglionic plexi (GP) activity in the epicardial fat pads, mild term antiarrhythmic effects can be achieved with fewer antiarrhythmic drugs and anticoagulant treatment.
Age is no longer an absolute contraindication to cardiac surgery therefore there is often need for combined interventions (double valve repair/replacement, or coronary artery bypass graft and valve repair/replacement) with relative prolongation of cardiopulmonary bypass time. Prolonged cardiopulmonary bypass use causes an increase in the inflammatory response, and on the other a need for blood reinfusion and therefore lipid microemboli from the operative field. The clinical consequences for patients are post-operative delirium and post-operative cognitive impairment. These two neurological complications involve up to 45% of elderly patients undergoing cardiac surgery and have a significant impact on quality of life, hospitalization and mortality in the short and long term. The Remowell 2 oxygenator system has demonstrated in preliminary studies that, compared to the gold standard Inspire oxygenator, it can guarantee a significant reduction of hemodilution, inflammatory systemic response and embolization of lipid microemboli and leukocytes. In light of these considerations, it is possible to formulate the hypothesis that the use of the Remowell 2 device can contribute to significantly reducing the onset of post-operative delirium and cognitive impairment. The present study is designed to validate this hypothesis in a randomized controlled scenario.
This study will assess whether non-pharmacological interventions by a comfort coach affect the amount of opioid pain medication used, as well as perceived physical pain and emotional anxiety and healthcare utilization for adult cardiac surgery patients. Participants that are eligible for the study will be randomized to the comfort coach arm or standard of care. Both groups will complete surveys at the specific time frames in order to compare their outcomes. The study hypothesis is that there will be a decrease in opioid use in the intervention group compared to the standard of care arm during the 90-day perioperative course, as well as a decrease in pain and anxiety along with a lower composite outcome of healthcare utilization.