Clinical Trials Logo

Emergencies clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Emergencies.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT06344195 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Acute Apical Abscess

Valacyclovir Monotherapy in Pain Management of Acute Periapical Abscesses After Emergency Chamber Opening

Antiviral
Start date: March 27, 2024
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This study is aimed to evaluate the efficacy of valacyclovir in reducing postoperative pain following emergency chamber opening for acute apical abscess . There will be 82 participants, (41 in each group) Group A will receive Valacyclovir Group B will receive standard treatment i.e. Naproxen Sodium. Pain level will be assessed by using Numeric rating scale for 6 days

NCT ID: NCT06344078 Recruiting - Stoma Ileostomy Clinical Trials

Surgical Italian Guide for the Management of Complicated Acute Diverticulitis Emergency Setting (SIGMA-D). A Prospective Observational Multicenter Study on Behalf of the Italian Society of Colorectal Surgery (SICCR).

SIGMA-D
Start date: January 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study will include data collected from surgical units performing emergency surgery in Italy during 2024, with a one-year follow-up period for each patient. Data for each center will be prospectively collected through a database filled out by the Italian Society of Colorectal Surgery (SICCR) members who participate to the study. Specific data will include: WSES diverticulitis classification, procedure timing, laparoscopic/converted procedures, rate of performed protection ileostomies or colostomies, rate and timing of Hartmann reversal or stoma closure, procedures with more than two operators, procedures with expert first operator, night or weekend procedures, and patients aged over 80. Postoperative data will focus on complication rates and mortality at one, six, and twelve months.

NCT ID: NCT06339385 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Management of PADIS in Emergency Intensive Care Unit

Start date: June 13, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Investigate the prevalence of PADIS in EICU, as well as the awareness and clinical implementation status of medical staff towards PADIS. The investigators conducted a multicenter cross-sectional survey in mainland China, including a one-day point prevalence investigation and a questionnaire survey. The inclusion criteria encompassed all adult patients admitted to the participating emergency department intensive care units (EDICUs) during the on-site screening, while exclusion criteria comprised patients aged less than 18 years, EDICU stays duration less than 24 hours before the screening, and participation in other concurrent trials. Hospital and nursing records from the 24 hours preceding enrollment were examined to document the assessment rate of pain, agitation-sedation, and delirium. Physicians and nurses on duty 24 hours before the patients' enrollment was invited to complete the questionnaire survey regarding the ICU profiles, professional expertise, assessment and treatment of PAD, early mobilization, and sleep improvement practices.

NCT ID: NCT06338111 Completed - Biomarker Clinical Trials

Can we Improve Mortality Prediction in Patients With Sepsis in the Emergency Department

Start date: November 9, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study aims to identify the prognostic role of procalcitonin (PCT), soluble Triggering Receptor Expressed on Myeloid Cells-1 (sTREM-1), the soluble form of the urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (suPAR), highly sensitive C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), Interleukin-6 (IL-6), and azurocidin 1 (AZU1) in 28-day mortality for patients with sepsis in Emergency Department.

NCT ID: NCT06333106 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Fecal Impaction of Colon

PoCUS Diagnostic Accuracy for Fecal Impaction in the Emergency Department: A Prospective Study

Start date: June 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Many medical and paramedical specialties regularly use point-of-care ultrasound (PoCUS) in clinical practice. The diagnosis of fecal impaction is quite common in the elderly living in nursing homes with a prevalence of 47.3%. Fecal impaction remains a major source of morbidity, while its etiology is often multifactorial and its diagnosis challenging. Current recommendations for the diagnosis of fecal impaction support the use of plain abdominal x-rays. PoCUS is a non-irradiating procedure and a clinical diagnostic tool that can be used in a variety of ways during abdominal examinations. Most scientific societies encourage the use of PoCUS to respond to a specific clinical question rather than to provide a diagnosis, which is usually confirmed by conventional ultrasound. However, the combination of physical examination and PoCUS may improve the diagnostic approach. This multicentric prospective study protocol aims to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of PoCUS in patients aged 75 years or older with suspected fecal impaction in the emergency department compared with plain abdominal x-ray (or abdominal CT scan if required as part of the emergency department investigations).

NCT ID: NCT06332586 Enrolling by invitation - Triage Clinical Trials

The Learning Effect of Applying Diversified Teaching in Emergency Injury Classification -Taking the Emergency Nurse of a Regional Hospital in Yunlin County as an Example

Start date: March 25, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

"Triage" is the first process of emergency treatment. It is mainly based on the severity of the disease and the appropriate allocation of limited people, time, place, and medical resources. It is very important and related to the quality of medical care. In order to accurately judge the severity of patients, reduce the individual errors of artificial memory and increase the consistency of the judgment of triage levels, the new emergency five-level triage classification standard (Taiwan Triage and Acuity Scale) was implemented in 2010. , TTAS), the purpose is to allocate medical resources in the most appropriate manner at the appropriate time. It has been revised many times so far, so correct injury classification can maximize the safety of people's lives. This article reviews the relevant literature and finds that to have an efficient injury classification so that each patient receives appropriate medical allocation, an organized, effective and systematic injury inspection process structure is needed to enable the injury nurse to perform correct inspections. Injury skills and cognition should be actively promoted, and this policy must require traumatization nurses to continuously update their traumatization cognition and skills, and must also continue to conduct regular assessments and reviews to continuously improve the quality of traumatization grading by traumatization nurses. It can be seen that triage nurses must have skills, knowledge, attitudes and systems to improve the accuracy of triage levels and ensure the treatment of patients who need priority treatment . Therefore, this study can be used to understand the learning effectiveness of trauma care before and after diversified teaching, which can be used as a basis for teaching new trauma care nurses.

NCT ID: NCT06331767 Not yet recruiting - HIV Clinical Trials

Development of a Multilevel HIV Prevention Intervention for the Emergency Department

mSYNC
Start date: June 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to pilot test a psychosocial-behavioral mobile health (mHealth) human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevention intervention in people who use drugs presenting to the emergency department (ED). The main question the study aims to answer is: is the intervention acceptable and appropriate? Participants will use the mHealth app while waiting in the ED and also at home for 90 days. Participants will be asked to complete surveys at baseline, before leaving the ED, and at 30-, 60-, and 90-day follow up visits.

NCT ID: NCT06330207 Not yet recruiting - Odontalgia Clinical Trials

An Emergency Department (ED) Provider Centered Intervention for Non-Traumatic Dental Condition Management (NTDC)

Start date: August 1, 2025
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall objective of this proposal is to understand the barriers and facilitators to non-traumatic dental condition (NTDC) management in the emergency department (ED) through quantitative and qualitative methods. The first aim will determine the national variation in NTDC prescribing in the ED and subsequent ED/urgent care revisits and hospitalizations within 30-days of an index ED visit. Using national electronic health records and integrated claims datasets and a random effects model, we will identify factors associated with prescribing for NTDC and variation at the patient, provider, hospital and state levels. The second aim identifies ED providers' perceived barriers and facilitators to the management of NTDC in the ED. Using individual in depth interviews, ED providers (physicians, advanced practice providers) will identify the facilitators and barriers to management and prescribing for NTDC in the ED.

NCT ID: NCT06329752 Not yet recruiting - Ankle Fractures Clinical Trials

Sciatic Nerve Block for Ankle and Leg Fracture Manipulation in the Emergency Department

AnkleMan
Start date: May 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this feasibility clinical trial is to assess the acceptability of ultrasound-guided sciatic nerve block when performed at Emergency Departments for manipulation and temporary stabilization of distal leg and ankle fractures. The trial aims to assess: - The acceptability of sciatic nerve block - The technical feasibility of sciatic nerve block - The technical success of sciatic nerve block - The analgesic efficacy of sciatic nerve block In addition to that, this study aims to - Describe patient-reported and physician-reported satisfaction - Assess the Adverse Event rate at 48 hours post intervention

NCT ID: NCT06327893 Not yet recruiting - Drowning Clinical Trials

Patients Treated by the Danish Emergency Medical Services Following Non-drowning Water Rescues From 2016 to 2023

RESCUE
Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Since 2015, all Danish prehospital EMS have used the nationwide Prehospital Electronic Medical Record (PEMR). In 2023, the investigators developed the Danish Drowning Formula (DDF), a text-search algorithm designed to search the unstructured text fields in the electronic medical records with comprehensive search criteria to identify all potential water-related incidents. This protocol describes the first study to analyse the prehospital data from a nationwide Danish cohort of patients treated by the EMS from 2016 to 2023 following non-drowning aquatic rescues.