View clinical trials related to Hemorrhage.
Filter by:Intracerebral hemorrhage is bleeding into the brain and is a major cause of stroke and other complications. Brain injury from intracerebral hemorrhage occurs in two phases. The early phase involves the mechanical compression of brain tissue by the expanding hematoma. In a later phase, brain swelling develops causing further compression that may lead to brain herniation and death. This study investigates the neuroprotective role of haptoglobin, in minimizing the development of brain swelling following intracerebral hemorrhage.
The aim of this study is to characterize the coagulation changes, using thromboelastography (TEG), after prophylactic tranexamic administration during cesarean delivery. Specifically, TEG values will be compared in patients who receive prophylactic tranexamic acid or placebo before surgery, during elective cesarean delivery, and 2 hours postpartum. Postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) is increasing in incidence in the United States, renewing interest in multimodal approaches to blood conservation during cesarean delivery. Pharmacologic therapy with the antifibrinolytic agent, tranexamic acid (TA), has been shown to reduce estimated blood loss (EBL) during cesarean delivery, but its effect on global coagulation as assessed by TEG, and how this correlates with lowering blood loss, has not been elucidated. This study will be conducted as a randomized, double-blind, controlled trial with two study arms: control (60 patients); and treatment (60 patients). Subjects will be pre-medicated with routine pre-cesarean delivery medications including oral sodium citrate 30 mL and intravenous (IV) metoclopramide 10 mg. A peripheral IV and noninvasive hemoglobin monitor will be placed, and baseline labs sent: type and screen, serum hemoglobin, platelet count, fibrinogen, activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), prothrombin time (PT), and baseline TEG values (r time, k time, alpha angle, and maximum amplitude). Patients will have blood pressure, heart rate, and pulse oximetry measured throughout surgery as per standard of care. Patients will all receive IV lactated Ringers' (LR) solution prior to surgery and throughout surgery, with volume recorded and a goal of less than 2 L unless more IV fluid is clinically indicated. All patients will have a spinal anesthetic as per standard of care, with hyperbaric bupivacaine 12 mg, fentanyl 10 μg, and hydromorphone 100 μg. If the anesthetic plan is altered (combined spinal-epidural, general anesthesia conversion, general anesthesia planned), indications and medication doses used will be noted for analysis. Immediately following induction of anesthesia and prior to skin incision, infusion of study solution will be initiated. Study solutions will consist of: 1. Control group: 100 mL 0.9% normal saline (NS). 2. Treatment group: 100 mL 0.9% NS containing 1g tranexamic acid (TA). Study solution will be infused via an infusion pump over 10 minutes. Blood loss will be measured by visual estimate and weight of surgical sponges. Noninvasive hemoglobin will be measured throughout the study. All routine care lab values will be noted. At minimum, one lab panel will be sent one hour after study solution initiation (hemoglobin, fibrinogen, platelet count, aPTT, PT, and TEG).
This is a study comparing the effect of erythromycin or metoclopramide, 2 prokinetic drugs (Drugs which are known to speed up the emptying of the stomach or in other words to move the blood out of the stomach faster) given before endoscopy to patients with upper Gastrointestinal bleeding compared to patients who will not receive either of these medications before their endoscopy.
Patients presenting to the emergency room with upper gastrointestinal bleeding and a Glasgow Blatchford score of zero will be randomly assigned to further care in the inpatient vs. outpatient setting. The hypothesis of this study is that patients who are managed as outpatients will require interventions at a rate not higher than those managed as inpatients and will have lower direct healthcare costs.
This is an observational study to determine the effect of various treatments prescribed by healthcare providers for heavy menstrual bleeding on bleeding related quality of life (as measured by the Menstrual Bleeding Questionnaire) and to compare electronic and paper-based modes of data collection.
This study concerns women diagnosed with postpartum hemorrhage and requiring sulprostone therapy. Included patients are randomized to two arms: the "Sulprostone + Bakri balloon" arm versus the "Sulprostone alone" arm. The main objective of this study is to compare the efficiency of a care strategy including the Bakri balloon to that of routine care without the Bakri balloon via a cost-consequence study juxtaposing costs and the necessity of invasive procedures (arterial embolization, ligation of arteries, hysterectomy, intrauterine sutures) for controlling postpartum hemorrhage.
This double-blinded, placebo-controlled, randomized trial will compare the effects of the use of a combined oral contraceptive pill to a placebo pill for women who are experiencing irregular and/or heavy bleeding associated with the use of an etonogestrel (ETG) implant. The hypothesis of the study is: - Use of combined oral contraceptive will significantly improve bleeding patterns for users of ETG implant - Continuation rate of ETG implant users will be increased by use of combined oral contraceptive in women desiring ETG implant removal because of the undesirable bleeding - Adverse events will be uncommon and acceptable to women who use a combined oral contraceptive with the ETG implant
The occurence of a minor craniocerebral trauma in patients receiving vitamine K antagonist treatment leads to a high risk of bleeding. Current guidelines recommend to perform a CT scan, and, in case of intracranial bleeding, to reverse anticoagulation with concomitant administration of prothrombin complex concentrates (PCCs) and vitamin K. However, even if a reversion is performed, the prognostic of post-traumatic intracranial bleeding remain bad. The investigators hypothesize that, for patients admitted in an emergency department after a minor head trauma and receiving anticoagulant treatment, a systematic preventive reversion with PCCs can lead to a significant reduction of intracranial haemorrhage and can also improve the neurological prognostic of patients versus the current strategy. PREVACT will test this hypothesis, in an open label, randomized, multicentre, clinical trial involving 400 patients.
The purpose of this study is to determine if cooling the neck of patients with ICH decreases brain temperature. In addition, the investigators will determine if the device improves the delivery of oxygen to the brain. A third goal is to determine if cooling the neck lowers intracranial pressure (which is often times high in patients after ICH).
Total hip arthroplasty (THA) is a procedure associated with perioperative blood loss, requiring blood transfusions in some patients. The major cause of this blood loss is due to surgical trauma that induces the clotting cascade and fibrinolysis. Several previous studies and meta-analyses have shown that tranexamic acid is an effective antifibrinolytic agent that reduces blood loss in a variety of situations. Tranexamic acid given in an intravenous form has been extensively studied and shown to be efficacious in cardiothoracic, spine surgical procedures as well as total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and THA. Similarly, topical tranexamic acid has been associated with decreased blood loss in cardiac surgeries as well. Recently, results from a prospective randomized study on the topical use of tranexamic acid in total knee arthroplasty found it to be effective for reducing postoperative blood loss. Taking all of the above into consideration we have proposed a study to evaluate effects of topical application of tranexamic acid on postoperative blood loss and blood transfusion on patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of the topical application of tranexamic acid on blood loss in patients undergoing a primary unilateral total hip arthroplasty.