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Creatinine Clearance clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04375358 Completed - Clinical trials for Creatinine Clearance

Creatinine Clearance as a Predictor of Successful Withdrawl of Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy in Intensive Care

STOP EERc
Start date: October 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Acute renal failure is a common complication in patients admitted to intensive care. Due to the increasing incidence of acute renal failure, the use of Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy (CRRT) is on the rise in the intensive care unit. The use of CRRT exposes patients to some complications (bleeding, hemodynamic instability, antibiotic underdosing, malnutrition and infections), justifying the importance of optimizing the quality and reliability of this technique. Renal function is classically assessed by diuresis and creatinine. Creatinine clearance is an indirect measure of glomerular filtration rate. Measuring creatinine clearance is a simple, accessible and relatively inexpensive method. Traditionally, clreatinine clearance has required 24-hour urine collection. However, it has been shown that two-hour urine collection is also an accurate tool. There is little information and few recommendations as to when to discontinue CRRT. A predictive index for the withdrawal of CRRT would reduce the duration of treatment, reduce complications and costs, and speed up patient rehabilitation. Various parameters have been described as tools for deciding when to stop dialysis: diuresis before stopping CRRT, urine and blood creatinine, daily urinary urea excretion, and sodium and water balance. Among these factors, urine output and creatinine appear to be promising predictive factors. The measurement of creatinine clearance combines these two factors and can therefore be a good tool for predicting the return of adequate renal function. Retrospective work carried out by Fröhlich et al in 2012 suggested that creatinine clearance measured over 2 hours could be a good marker for successful withdrawal. The hypothesis of the study is that creatinine clearance measured over 2 hours after stopping CRRT is be predictive of the success of the withdrawal from this type of therapy.

NCT ID: NCT00396396 Unknown status - Clinical trials for Creatinine Clearance

Role of Acetylcysteine in Creatinine Clearance

Start date: October 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to investigate the exact role of Acetylcysteine (Mucomyst) in altering creatinine clearance. Prior studies have shown the protective effects of Acetylcysteine on contrast-induced renal dysfunction. In these studies, Acetylcysteine lowered the incidence of serum creatinine elevation after administration of radiographic contrast agents. Not only was the increase in serum creatinine prevented, the studies also demonstrated a significant increase in creatinine clearance after administration of the agent. These prior studies did not evaluate if the increase in creatinine clearance was indeed from a protective benefit of Acetylcysteine in preserving the GFR versus simply increasing the proximal tubular creatinine secretion without actually affecting the GFR. We propose an experiment to help support our hypothesis that Acetylcysteine increases creatinine clearance via an increase in proximal tubular secretion of creatinine.