View clinical trials related to Chronic Kidney Diseases.
Filter by:The goal of this placebo-controlled, double-blinded cross-over trial is to test whether patiromer, compared with placebo, better enables up-titration of RAAS-blocker treatment in patients with chronic kidney disease stage 3b/4. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Does patiromer allow uptitration of irbesartan, resulting in a significant reduction in albuminuria and blood pressure? - Does patiromer allow uptitration of irbesartan, resulting in a significant reduction in blood pressure? The trial contains the following interventions: - Participants will be switched from their ACEi/ARB to a standardised dose of irbesartan (150 mg/d). - During two 12-week study periods, participants will receive either patiromer 8.4 g/d or placebo. The order of study periods is randomized. - At the start of each study period irbesartan will be up-titrated to 300 mg/d. - After 1 and 6 weeks, at both periods, plasma potassium will be measured and the irbesartan dose will be reduced to 150 mg/d in case plasma potassium exceeds 5.0 mmol/L. - At 12 weeks from the start of the study period, the endpoints will be assessed. - Between the two study periods, there is a 6-week washout. Irbesartan dose during the wash-out period will be 150mg/d. After washout, participants will switch from the patiromer arm to the placebo arm or vice versa.
The goal of this observational study is to learn about the value of multimodal ultrasound in early detection of left ventricular systolic dysfunction in patients with chronic kidney disease(CKD). The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. If first-phase ejection fraction(EF1)could early detect the left ventricular systolic dysfunction in patients with CKD. 2. Whether EF1 can detect left ventricular systolic dysfunction in patients with CKD more sensitively than speckle-tracking echocardiography and myocardial work. Participants will need to cooperate to do an echocardiography. Researchers will compare healthy volunteers and patients with CKD to see if EF1 could early detect the left ventricular systolic dysfunction.
This is a randomized, double-blind sham-controlled monocentric trial. 30 patients that are diagnosed with hypertension and with moderate to severe chronic kidney disease are included in this trial. 20 of them are randomized into the active treatment arm, 10 into the sham arm. Low-intensity extracorporal shock wave (Li-ESWT) sessions (arm1) or sham sessions (arm2), will be administered with a dedicated probe within three consecutive weeks to the kidneys of patients.The study will add data to the effects of the shock wave treatment on blood pressure and will assess whether this treatment improves renal function, perfusion and oxygenation. The study includes a third arm (arm3) in which treatment sessions are administered to patients that were in the placebo group in the first phase of the study (arm2).
This pilot study will assess the efficacy of a pregnancy and contraception education decision aid (DA) for patients with chronic kidney disease to support decisions about reproductive health, and will assess feasibility and acceptability of the intervention to inform future Research Project Grant (R01) level studies.
The impact of narrative nursing interventions on negative emotions, self-efficacy, quality of life in individuals undergoing maintenance hemodialysis
The prevalence of chronic kidney disease is rising steadily and represents a major public health challenge. Hypertension and proteinuria are two factors strongly associated with the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and the high risk of cardiovascular complications. Achieving blood pressure control and reducing proteinuria is therefore a major objective in the management of chronic renal failure. Until recently, inhibitors of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system were the only therapeutic class known to have both anti-proteinuric and anti-hypertensive action, reducing the risk of progression to end-stage renal disease. The Investigators intend to conduct an observational study with the primary objective of studying the evolution of proteinuria in kidney transplant patients treated with dapagliflozin according to the marketing authorization. The secondary objectives of the study are to investigate other expected benefits, including effects on renal function and metabolic effects, as well as potential side-effects of this treatment in this population.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the treatment response to terlipressin and albumin in patients with suspicion of HRS-AKI and signs of chronic parenchymal kidney disease (HRS-AKI-like syndrome) compared to patients without signs of chronic parenchymal kidney disease (HRS-AKI).
Background: Childhood cancer survivors (CCS) are at elevated risk of chronic health conditions. Chemotherapies can cause recurrent acute kidney injury which may progress to kidney fibrosis, chronic kidney disease (CKD) or hypertension (HTN). CCS surviving to adulthood are at ≥3 times the risk (vs. non-CCS) for CKD, HTN and lower quality of life. However, the timing of CKD and HTN onset in CCS completing cancer therapy in childhood remains unclear. Guidelines provide recommendations on managing post-cancer therapy effects in CCS, but they lack specificity on kidney testing content, frequency and complications. This discord is largely due to knowledge gaps on which CCS develop CKD or HTN after cancer therapy, when outcomes occur and their severity. Existing work has shown in select patients, CKD and HTN in CCS likely begins in the first 5 years post-cancer therapy and that the burden is significant. With robust data on CKD and HTN, international CCS follow-up guidelines can be optimized to include detailed and actionable recommendations on kidney and blood pressure monitoring and treatment.
The risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) is significantly elevated in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Notably, women with CKD commonly experience menstrual disturbances induced by CKD, which may contribute to impaired vascular function and elevated CVD risk. However, most of the literature in nephrology focuses on male patients, and studies on women's vascular health are limited. Establishing effective therapies for improving vascular function and reducing CVD risk in women with CKD is a high research priority of the NIH. Equol contributes to improvement in vascular function, mediated in part by its anti-oxidative and anti-inflammatory properties. However, there is no information on the effect of equol on vascular function in women with CKD. The goal of the proposed project is to determine the acute effect (1 hour after ingestion) of oral equol supplementation on vascular function in postmenopausal women with and without CKD.
This is a multicenter, prospective, observational registry platform study which is designed to establish a CKD registry platform by collecting data on the demographics, etiology and staging, clinical characteristics, diagnostic and treatment patterns, and clinical outcomes of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), to describe the current status of the diagnosis and treatment of patients with CKD and the gaps from the diagnostic and treatment guidelines, explore the risk factors for disease progression and clinical outcomes in CKD patients, and construct a risk prediction model for CKD progression and clinical outcomes.