View clinical trials related to Endocarditis.
Filter by:The aim of the study is to describe the effect and meaning of an integrated rehabilitation programme, consisting of physical training and psycho-educational care, for patients treated for infective endocarditis. The hypothesis is, that integrated rehabilitation can improve mental health, physical capacity and other factors.
Understudied drugs will be administered to children per standard of care as prescribed by their treating caregiver and only biological sample collection during the time of drug administration will be involved. A total of approximately 7000 children aged <21 years who are receiving these drugs for standard of care will be enrolled and will be followed for up a maximum of 90 days. The goal of this study is to characterize the pharmacokinetics of understudied drugs for which specific dosing recommendations and safety data are lacking. The prescribing of drugs to children will not be part of this protocol. Taking advantage of procedures done as part of routine medical care (i.e. blood draws) this study will serve as a tool to better understand drug exposure in children receiving these drugs per standard of care. The data collected through this initiative will also provide valuable pharmacokinetic and dosing information of drugs in different pediatric age groups as well as special pediatric populations (i.e. obese).
Background Current management of infective endocarditis include admission and treatment with parenteral antibiotics for 4 weeks - 6 weeks. Resource demands and psychological issues of present management strategy make it highly relevant to seek for alternative more lenient alternatives. Experiences with oral treatment are only sporadically described, but observational data suggest that oral treatment could be a feasible option. The investigators have in 2010 treated 12 endocarditis patients with partial oral antibiotics with a 100% success rate. Study design The POET study is a Danish multicenter, prospective, randomized, open label study. The primary aim is to show non-inferiority of partial oral treatment with antibiotics of endocarditis compared to full parenteral treatment. Stable patients (n=400) with streptococci, staphylococci or enterococci infecting the mitral valve or the aortic valve will be included. After a minimum of 10 days of parenteral treatment, patients will be randomized to oral therapy or parenteral therapy. Special recommendations for oral treatment have been developed based on expected minimal inhibitory concentrations and pharmacokinetic calculations. Patients will be followed for 6 months after completion of antibiotic therapy. The primary endpoint is a composition of all cause mortality, unplanned cardiac surgery, embolic events and relapse of positive blood cultures with the primary pathogen.
Before Daptomycin (Cubicin ®) approved by the U.S. FDA in 2003, There were large-scale clinical trials conducted that included more than 1,000 subjects and than Daptomycin got complicated skin and soft tissue infections (CSSSI) indication. After 2004, Daptomycin got new indications about bacteremia and endocarditis due to success outcomes in the clinical trial which included infected in blood flow and endocardial infected patients. All subjects in Daptomycin clinical trials are European and American race. It is necessary that collecting safety and efficacy data of Daptomycin in Taiwan race. I will intent to evaluate the safety and efficacy of Daptomycin which were used in patients with serious gram-positive infections retrospectively. And the outcome could be a reference for Daptomycin future using.
The purpose of this study is to monitor the safety and efficacy of CUBICIN under conditions of actual use in patients who are diagnosed with complicated Skin and Skin Structure infection (cSSI) or Staphylococcus aureus bacteria including right-sided endocarditis and are prescribed CUBICIN by their physician.
The purpose of this study is to assess the effectiveness of cardiac CT versus TEE in endocarditis patients.
Prospective study including all the consecutive patients admitted at the Department of Cardiology, Timone Hospital wih a definite diagnosis of IE according to the modified Duke criteria. The period of inclusion will be for 24 months. Eighty patients and age-matched control subject will be included. Primary end point are EE occurring during the antimicrobial treatment and secondary end points will be 6-month mortality, vegetation length and the impact of antimicrobial treatment on inflammation-induced procoagulant changes and endothelial cell activation.
The study evaluates the efficacy and safety of fosfomycin and imipenem for the treatment of methicillin-resistant staphyloccocus aureus infective endocarditis in comparison to vancomycin, the standard therapy.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether Libman-Sacks endocarditis (inflammation of the heart valves) is the cause of neuropsychiatric manifestations (stroke, transient ischemic attacks, cognitive dysfunction, seizures, acute confusional state, or psychosis) in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. Hypothesis of the study: Libman-Sacks endocarditis (especially valve vegetations or "small valve growths") generate macro (large) and micro (tiny) emboli that occlude the medium and small cerebral vessels resulting in altered perfusion, ischemic brain injury, and major NPSLE (stroke, TIA, seizures, cognitive dysfunction, acute confusional state, or psychosis).
There have been no prospective clinical studies in infective endocarditis comparing early surgery with the conventional treatment strategy based on current guidelines. The purpose of this prospective randomized trial is to compare clinical outcomes of early surgery versus conventional treatment strategy in patients with high embolic risk of infective endocarditis.