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ERAS clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04642274 Recruiting - ERAS Clinical Trials

The Impact of ERAS Program in Cardiac Surgery on Patient Prognosis

Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of the study is to develop, verify and optimize the ERAS protocol for cardiac surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04586257 Completed - ERAS Clinical Trials

Effect of Regional Anesthesia on Enhanced Recovery After Spine Surgeries

Start date: October 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will be carried out on 80 patients who will be presented for different spine surgeries under general anesthesia and regional anesthesia technique in Tanta university hospitals. The study was approved by the research ethics committee of the faculty of medicine. Patients will be admitted to the OR where induction of general anesthesia was started and then, the patients will be randomly distributed into two equal groups; - - Group I (40 patients) (ESP block): patients in this group will receive ESP block after induction of general anesthesia. - Group II (40 patients) (TLIP block): patients in this group will receive TLIP block after induction of general anesthesia Measurements; - The length of hospital stay as the primary outcome Postoperative pain scores and opioid consumption as the Secondary outcome

NCT ID: NCT04466696 Completed - Colon Cancer Clinical Trials

Feasibility of ERAS Protocol in T4 Colorectal Cancer Patients

Start date: January 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Patients diagnosed with T4 colorectal cancer represent a specific subgroup of colorectal patients, frequently composed of fragile patients whose advanced nature of the disease often requires a multi organ resection by an open surgery approach and frequently leads to higher intra/postoperative complication.Those characteristics makes them to be considered less suitable for ERAS protocol, especially regarding an expected difficult compliance to postoperative items. The impact of enhanced recovery program on postoperative outcomes in this subset of patients has never been addressed in literature, in fact most of studies either excluded T4 patients due to higher rates of complication or adopted an homogeneous patient sampling analizing all stage colorectal cancer together. Our aim is to investigate the feasibility of ERAS protocol in T4 colorectal patient, primary outcome was to compare postoperative lenght of stay between T4 colorectal patients treated with ERAS protcol and those treated with standard of care.

NCT ID: NCT04451473 Recruiting - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

Lung Surgery With Enhanced Recovery VS. Lung Surgery Without Enhanced Recovery

Start date: October 8, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Objective: The adoption of Enhanced Recovery Surgery programs in lung resection is relatively recent with limited outcome data. This study aimed to determine the impact of an Enhanced Recovery Surgery pathway on short- term and long- term results in patients undergoing lung resection for primary lung cancer. Methods: A Randomized Controlled Trial was designed to collect the perioperative data on consecutive patients undergoing lung resection for primary lung cancer. Patients will be randomizely assigned to the ERAS- Group and Control- Group. Short-term and long- term effect will be compared between the two groups.

NCT ID: NCT04438590 Completed - Insulin Resistance Clinical Trials

Kelulut Honey as an Alternate Source of Carbo-Loading in Abdominal Surgery Involving the Digestive System

Kel-Load
Start date: October 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study aims to identify if Kelulut Honey can be a potential alternative for the use of preoperative carboloading instead of the commercially available product, Carborie.

NCT ID: NCT03949114 Recruiting - Delirium Clinical Trials

Rehabilitation Intervention on Prevention of Postoperative Delirium

Start date: May 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

1. A questionnaire on "Cognition and Attitudes of Nurses on Postoperative Deafness in Neurosurgical Patients" was initially formed through reference literature and expert opinions. The content includes two dimensions of knowledge and attitude, all of which are single-choice questions. There are 11 items in the knowledge dimension, 1 point for the correct answer, 0 point for the wrong answer, and 0 to 11 points for the total score. The average score is the average score and the score of the score is the average score. The average score is ≤60%. Knowledge; attitude dimension is 7 items, using the Likert 4 rating method, "very disagree ~ very agree" count "1 to 4 points", total score 7 to 28 points. A sample questionnaire survey was conducted among non-severe unit nurses in the top three hospitals in the province to understand the level of cognitive mastery of the neurosurgical nurses in the province and the current status of interventions, and to compare the attitudes of nurses with different academic qualifications, years of work and work experience to postoperative intervention. And the level of knowledge mastery. 2. Patients who underwent surgery on the neurosurgery in our hospital from December 31, 2010 to December 31, 2019 were used as the control group. After informed notification, the patients with the enrollment conditions were screened for Fried's debilitating phenotype and performed. Post-routine care; patients who underwent craniotomy in our department of neurosurgery from January 1, 2020 to June 31, 2020 were included in the intervention. Patients who met the criteria for admission were informed and informed consent was obtained. Develop an early rehabilitation process to guide patients to systematic early rehabilitation training. To compare the incidence of debilitating, sputum incidence (Nursing Delirium Screening Scale, Nu-DESC), sputum-related adverse events, Activity of Daily Living (ADL), patient satisfaction, etc. The clinical application effect of the early rehabilitation intervention system.

NCT ID: NCT03189550 Completed - Colorectal Surgery Clinical Trials

Enhanced Recovery After Surgery in Colorectal Surgery: A Large-Scale Quality Improvement Project

ERAS
Start date: July 1, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Multimodal perioperative care pathways have evolved into enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS). ERAS pathways improve the quality of patient care, reduce morbidity, and shorten length of stay. This project will test the hypothesis that implementation of a multi-modal ERAS perioperative care protocol in colorectal surgical patients will result in significantly reduced perioperative morbidity and mortality.