View clinical trials related to Cardiac Surgery.
Filter by:To determine the efficacy of cardioversion and amiodarone for cardiac patients who develop postoperative atrial fibrillation
This is a multicenter, double-blind, randomized trial to assess the efficacy and safety of colchicine for post-pericardiotomy syndrome prevention, post-operative effusions prevention, and post-operative atrial fibrillation prevention.
A large multicenter randomized controlled trial of approximately 1700 critically ill patients' status post complex cardiac surgery with sternotomy, called the Red Cell Storage Duration Study (RECESS), is currently ongoing. In the RECESS trial, study groups are randomized to either RBCs of less than or equal to 10 days storage time or to greater than or equal to 21 days. The primary outcome of RECESS is a change in multiple organ dysfunction score. Secondary outcomes in RECESS include all cause 28-day mortality, mechanical ventilation free days, and other clinical outcomes. The RECESS study presents a unique opportunity to investigate mechanisms associated with RBC storage duration in the context of clinical outcomes for well-characterized surgical study groups. The ancillary study described here is called the Mechanism and Repository Study (MARS) for RECESS. The MARS study will analyze the most commonly reported and hypothesized mechanisms considered to be associated with the RBC storage lesion and adverse outcomes in critically ill patients. Laboratories with expertise in RBC function, nitric oxide mechanisms, the coagulation cascade, microparticle analysis and immunology will each examine hypotheses addressing mechanisms potentially able to relate storage time to clinical outcomes in RBC transfusion recipients. At the conclusion of the study, the results will provide a much better understanding of how RBC storage age affects recipient RBC function, coagulation parameters, microparticle load and immune modulation. Perhaps most importantly, this study will also develop a large sample repository for future analysis.
The purpose of this study is to test whether keeping the amount of oxygen delivered to the brain above a certain level during surgery and 24-hours after surgery improves recovery. Hypothesis 1: keeping the amount of oxygen delivered to the brain above a certain level during surgery and 24-hours after surgery improves cognitive and neurological outcomes after cardiac and aortic surgery. Hypothesis 2: keeping the amount of oxygen delivered to the brain above a certain level during surgery and 24-hours after surgery helps reduce major organ problems after cardiac and aortic surgery. To test our hypotheses, the investigators will conduct a randomized control trial. Patients will be randomly assigned to one of two possible study groups. In the Treatment Group, the brain oxygen level will be watched by doctors and used to guide care in the operating room and the first day in the intensive care unit after surgery. Doctors will try to keep the brain oxygen level in a normal range by adjusting your blood pressure, carbon dioxide and blood acidity levels, and blood count. In the Control Group, the doctors will not be aware of the brain oxygen level unless it falls below a level that may be dangerous. If a patient's brain oxygen falls below such a level, the doctors will adjust the blood pressure, carbon dioxide and blood acidity levels, and blood count to increase the brain oxygen level. All other procedures will be part of regular medical care and will be performed according to the standard of care.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of modified glucose - insulin - potassium (GIK) therapy in cardiac surgery patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB).
This is a multi-centre randomized controlled pilot trial of two transfusion strategies in high risk patients having cardiac surgery. This study will be conducted in 7 Canadian centers and 1 American centre. Patients allocated to a "restrictive" transfusion strategy will receive a red cell transfusion if their hemoglobin is 75 g/L or less intraoperatively and postoperatively. Patients allocated to a "liberal" transfusion strategy will receive red cell transfusion if their hemoglobin concentration is 95 g/L or less intraoperatively and postoperatively in the intensive care unit, and less than 85 g/L on the ward. The primary objectives of this study are to determine 1) enrollment rates (patients enrolled/patients eligible), 2) consent rates (consent obtained/patients approached); and 3) protocol adherence (incidence and reasons for non adherence, lack of consent, rates of contamination and utilization of co-interventions). The secondary objectives are to determine 1) the mortality rate and the rate of the composite outcome for morbidity of renal, cardiac, neurological and infectious adverse events; 2) the proportion of missing data as a measure of the feasibility of the case report form; and 3) the proportion of blood products utilized (red cells, platelets and plasma). The results of the multicentre pilot study will be used to 1) maximize enrollment rates to ensure timely completion of recruitment of a definitive large randomized controlled trial, 2) maximize adherence rates, 3) determine event rates for sample size estimation for a definitive study, and to 4) optimize the case report form.
The primary aim of the study is to investigate whether a goal-directed resuscitation therapy in high-risk patients through cardiac index optimization using the LiDCO Rapid device reduces complications after cardiac surgery. The hypothesis is that there are better outcomes when achieving a cardiac index higher than 3L/min/m2 in those patients with an arterial lactate higher than 1.5 mmol/L.
The purpose of this study is to find the heparinization method, which 1. affect the heparin-protaminsulfate ratio in the best way to achieve haemostasis 2. gives the smallest change in endogenous thrombin potential (ETP)postoperative compared to preoperative (deltaETP) as an indicator for haemostatic activation during cardiac surgery. The hypothesis is that the deltaETP is larger in the Haemochron Signature Elite group than in the Hepcon-group because of the heparinization-method. Therefore there is a potential higher risk for use of bloodproducts postoperatively.
The investigators sought to determine whether intensive insulin therapy can improve prognosis of infants undergoing cardiac surgery.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between rewarming rate during cardiopulmonary bypass and clinical prognosis in infants undergoing cardiac surgery.