View clinical trials related to Hemorrhage.
Filter by:The objective is to create a dynamic clinical prediction model that includes routinely measured care and biological biomarkers to predict cerebral vasospasm within 14 days of bleeding in patients treated in the neurosurgical intensive care unit for subarachnoid hemorrhage. Patients admitted to intensive care will be followed for up to 14 days (D14 time horizon of interest), or until discharge from intensive care if earlier. Blood samples will be taken from D1 to D10 to isolate the blood biomarkers of interest for each patient. The measurement of biomarkers and cerebral vasospasm will be blinded to each other.
The aim of this clinical study conducted in accordance with the information in the literature is to compare the effects of administering tranexamic acid during orthognathic surgery, at different doses. Specifically, investigators aim to compare the effects of administering 1 ampoule IV (approximately 3 mg/kg) and 2 ampoules IV (approximately 6 mg/kg), and evaluate their impact on intraoperative bleeding (ml), surgical duration (min), postoperative swelling, and intraoperative surgical field evaluation (Fromme Scale), by comparing them with control group (applying no drug administration) patient data.
Nowadays robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) has become the standard surgical treatment for localised prostate cancer. The robotic approach has been proven superior to open retropubic prostatectomy (ORP) in terms of surgical-related morbidity: RARP has in fact been associated with significantly lower estimated blood loos (EBL), lower transfusion rate, less length of stay, shorter catheterization time, lower risk of Clavien-Dindo grade II and III complications, lower risk of vesicourethral anastomotic stricture and less post-operative pain. The optimal anatomical visualisation and the extraordinary maneuverability, along with the tamponade effect of the pneumoperitoneum, are surely to be deemed responsible of this statistically significant differences. However, to this day no study has ever investigated the prognostic significance of haematological parameters in terms of predicting perioperative bleeding risk in patients undergoing RARP. Therefore, the investigators conducted a retrospective non-interventional cohort study to gather evidence concerning the impact of anemia and thrombocytopenia on bleeding risk following this surgical procedure. Furthermore, the investigators evaluated associations between demographical, pathological and surgical factors and hemorrhagic complications. The investigators retrospectively evaluated all the patients that underwent robot-assisted radical prostatectomy in our Urology Unit from the 1st of January 2017 to the 31th of December 2020. The investigators collected demographic, clinical and pathological data from the medical records of these patients, with particular attention to other known risk-factors for RARP-associated bleeding (e.g.: volume of the prostate, body mass index, smoking status, nerve sparing technique). Complications were analyzed according to the Clavien- Dindo classification. Bleeding was assessed by considering both the hemoglobin (Hb) drop after surgery and the fluid intraoperatively collected in the suction canister, with all the due adjustments. Moreover, post-operative haemorrhagic complications were evaluated. The investigators included patients not younger than 18 years old, of which records of a pre-operative full blood count in the 30 days prior to the surgery along with a full blood count the day after were available. Criteria for exclusion were a history of congenital coagulopathies and/or congenital thrombocytopenia and patients that underwent salvage radical prostatectomy after radiation therapy. Statistics: EBL and operative time learning curve is studied. Clinical, pathological, intraoperative risk factors analysis for higher EBL is performed by linear regression modelling. Factors are evaluated independently and jointly. Association between each factor above and post-operative outcomes (i.e. post-op bleeding, need of transfusion and hematuria) is also assessed.
BACKGROUND: Data on the awareness of the need to evaluate iron status and IDA prevalence in acute UGIB are limited. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to investigate the rate of evaluation of iron status and prevalence of iron deficiency anemia (IDA) and the associated factors in patients with anemia hospitalized for acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB).
A prospective, randomized, double-blind study will be conducted, including all patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding, defined as vomiting blood or black bowel movements, within 12 hours prior to admission. Patients will be randomized to receive intravenous metoclopramide 20 mg or placebo, a placebo is a look-alike substance that contains no active drug. Then endoscopy will be performed in the following 120 minutes, evaluating endoscopic visualization with the modified Avgerinos scale.
Primary Objective: To assess whether there is a higher incidence of uninformative ultrasound in black vs white women
This is an open-label, multicenter study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of HMPL-523 in adult subjects with ITP.
To find the best option to reduce blood loss related to abdominal hysterectomy (AH), the present randomized double-blinded study sought to compare the effects of locally administered vasopressin (VP) and tranexamic acid (TXA) on blood loss in women submitted to AH for benign lesions.
To establish a predictive model and scoring system for predicting severe complications after thrombectomy. This scoring system can be used to identify high-risk patients after endovascular thrombectomy, guide the early use of adjunctive interventions, and provide reference for future clinical trials.
ASTIM is a multicenter, prospective, randomised, blinded end-point assessed trial, to investigate the efficacy and safety of treatment based on intracranial pressure monitoring in improving the prognosis of patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage.