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Cardiac Surgery clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00586976 Terminated - Cardiac Surgery Clinical Trials

A Phase II/III Study of Continuous Local Anesthetic Infusion in Median Sternotomy Following Cardiac Surgery

Start date: July 2005
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Cardiac surgery is associated with pain in the post-operative period. We plan to conduct a study of local anesthetic, ropivacaine, infusion into the sternal wound in adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery to see if it will be safe and result in improved pain control and reduced time to extubation, duration of ICU and hospital stay.

NCT ID: NCT00545506 Terminated - Cardiac Surgery Clinical Trials

The Influence of a Warmed Surgical Bandage System on Subcutaneous Tissue Oxygen Tension After Cardiac Surgery

Start date: November 2007
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Warmed Surgical Bandage may improve tissue oxygenation and thus on the long run reduce wound infections

NCT ID: NCT00515736 Terminated - Trauma Clinical Trials

Impact Of Antioxidant Micronutrients On Intensive Care Unit (ICU) Outcome

Etude-AOX
Start date: January 2003
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Critically ill patients are generally exposed to an increased oxidative stress, which is proportional to the severity of their condition. Endogenous antioxidant (AOX) defenses are depleted particularly in those patients with intense inflammatory response. The hypothesis tested is that early I:V: administration of a combination of AOX micronutrient supplements (Se, Zn, Vit C, Vit E, Vit B1) would improve clinical outcome in selected critically ill patients, by reinforcing the endogenous AOX defenses and reducing organ failure.

NCT ID: NCT00229892 Terminated - Cardiac Surgery Clinical Trials

Incisions for Cardiac Surgery

Start date: February 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose is to evaluate the investigators' length of incisions based on patient weight, operative times, hospital lengths of stay, pain medicine requirements, complications and costs. These data will lead to a new minimally invasive standard of care without a reduction in outcomes.