View clinical trials related to Critical Limb Ischemia.
Filter by:Whilst mortality rates and surgical limitations are widely known and understood for each intervention performed, the cost implications, in UHL, are not known. Therefore, it is deemed a matter of interest to understand these costs and weigh them against the mortality rates for each intervention if available.
This is a retrospective analytical study conducted at Vascular and Endovascular surgery Department, Mansoura University Hospital, including all patients admitted at the two periods first six months of 2019 and 2020.To demonstrate the effect of COVID-19 pandemic on the practice of emergency vascular surgery and critical limb threatening ischemia interventions by comparison two periods first six months of 2019 and 2020.
Critical limb ischemia (CLI) is associated with severe pain that is a therapeutic challenge whit therapeutic limits for the use of conventional analgesics medications. ultrasound-guided continuous sciatic block (CCBN) is strategy effective and safe to consider in this patients. This prospective descriptive exploratory cohort study evaluates CCBN as a effective therapeutic tools for patients whit (CLI)
The objective of this trial is to determine whether PBMNCs in diabetic patients with critical, non revascularizable limb ischemia can prevent major amputation and affect mortality and healing.
Transcutaneous oxygen tension (TcpO2) at rest, sensitized by oxygen inhalation tests, is widely applied for the evaluation of chronic critical limb ischemia (CLI). If foot TcpO2 measurements are good prognostic factors of the risk of amputation or the probability of wound healing without amputation, they have never proven their hability to estimate the risk of death in patients with critical limb ischemia. On the one hand, studies have considered only the response observed on legs without considered the thoracic variations. On the other hand, the variability of the TcpO2 signal has never been analyzed as a prognostic factor. The objective of the NOVICE study is therefore to assess, first, whether the variability of resting TcPO2 values at thoracic probe as well as at affected limb probe is a morbidity-mortality prognostic factor and secondly, to evaluate during the oxygen tests, if the measurement of the amplitude of the distal responses in ischemic zone compared to the response observed in thoracic probe is a prognostic factor of morbi-mortality.
For subjects with critical limb ischemia, identify patient, physician/hospital, and geographic factors associated with variations in treatment strategies; compare treatments and outcomes, including quality of life, cost and cost effectiveness, at 6, 12 months.
This is a non-randomized, prospective, single center pilot study designed to evaluate the safety of the Temporary Spur Stent System to treat patients with infrapopliteal arterial disease, when used in conjunction with a commercially available limus-base drug coated balloon.
This study aims to evaluate the 12 month outcome of the mono- or combination therapy with iVascular Luminor DCB and Angiolite DES for treatment of TASC C and TASC D long tibial occlusive disease, presenting with critical limb ischemia.
The objective of this clinical investigation is to evaluate the 6-month outcome of the Selution Sirolimus-coated Balloon for the treatment of long tibial occlusive disease (TASC C and D) in patients with Critical Limb Ischemia (CLI)
This study will focus on determining; - How accurate the test is in detecting poor circulation - How it's accuracy compares to other commonly used tests, and - Whether test results are linked to the chance of ulcer healing or amputation. Across 2 hospitals, 305 diabetic patients will be scanned using the focused ultrasound test as well as other commonly used tests to detect poor circulation. Their results will be compared to a full version of the ultrasound test to identify the most accurate.