View clinical trials related to End Stage Renal Disease.
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This is a prospective cohort study which aims to explore the significance of brachial and central ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in predicting cardiovascular risk in patients with end stage renal disease who are treated with hemodialysis. Enrolled patients will receive a 48-hour central and brachial ambulatory blood pressure monitoring at its first-time dialysis after enrollment. And their cardiovascular events and deaths at first and third year will be followed-up.
This study is an open label randomized clinical trial that comparing intradialytic blood pressure slope-based ultrafiltration prescriptions to standard care in the chronic fluid management of maintenance hemodialysis patients. It also includes a cross sectional component evaluating the associations between intradialytic blood pressure slopes ascertained over 2 week periods with measurements of extracellular water/body weight obtained with multifrequency bioimpedance spectroscopy.
The main purpose is to establish the equivalence of Triferic iron administered via dialysate into the arterial blood line and into the venous blood line
The rate of fluid removal (ultrafiltration, UF) during hemodialysis (HD) may contribute to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality among individuals receiving maintenance HD. More rapid UF rates are associated with higher morbidity and mortality. Ultrafiltration profiling, the practice of varying UF rates to maximize fluid removal during periods of greatest hydration and plasma oncotic pressures, is one treatment modification that may reduce UF-related harm without necessitating reduction in interdialytic fluid intake or longer HD treatments. To date, UF profiling has not been adequately studied independent of sodium profiling. This study investigates the comparative effect of UF profiling versus non-profiled conventional HD on select cardiovascular and patient-reported outcomes. Participants will complete two phases of UF profiling and two phases of conventional HD and will act as their own controls.
The investigators propose a randomized study to compare bovine carotid artery (BCA) biologic grafts and expanded polytetrafluoroethylene grafts (ePTFE) for permanent hemodialysis access.
Treatment of patients with end-stage renal disease and critical limb ischemia still poses challenges to vascular medicine due to limited survival, comorbidities and infrapopliteal involvement of arteriosclerosis in these patients. Most optimal vascular therapy mode has not been finally decided in these patients. Therefore retrospective analysis of patients receiving open surgical and endovascular revascularisation was performed.
The overall aim of the study is to prospectively investigate the impact of two maintenance calcineurin inhibitor immunosuppressive regimens: once-daily extended release tacrolimus and twice-daily tacrolimus on subpopulations of T and B cells and alloreactive T cells as well as on renal allograft function.
High-efficiency post-dilution online hemodiafiltration (OL-HDF) using high-flux dialyzer and requiring high blood flow rate (BF ≥400 mL/min) has been reported to enhance protein-bound toxin and middle molecular toxin removal and improve patient survival. Unfortunately, the majority of patients could not reach that high BF because of vascular access issue. This randomized crossover study was conducted to compare these uremic toxin removals between the new modality (limited BF OL-HDF with super high-flux dialyzer) and the control (high-efficiency OL-HDF). The OL-HDF patients were randomized to undergo either new modality or control for 2 weeks before crossover to the other modality for another 2 weeks.
This study will enroll individuals who have end stage renal disease and who are undergoing a solitary kidney transplant. This study is investigating/evaluating the safety and effectiveness of collecting, expanding and infusing a specific certain type of immune cell known as Regulatory T cells (Treg cells) to renal transplant recipients who are using Zortress (Everolimus) as immunosuppressive therapy. Treg cells, once they have been expanded in the laboratory to help prevent kidney rejection. Treg cells are collected from a participant's blood through a procedure called apheresis. Treg cells are a type of white blood cells that are able to suppress the activity of other immune cells responsible for organ rejection. The investigator plans to enroll 12 participants at the University of Kentucky.