View clinical trials related to Hemorrhage.
Filter by:Gastrointestinal system bleedings are medical emergencies and the most common cause of hospital admissions related to digestive system diseases. Gastrointestinal system bleedings are a frequently encountered condition and one of the significant reasons leading to morbidity, mortality, and medical care costs. For acute upper gastrointestinal system bleedings, the annual hospital admission incidence in the United States is approximately 67 per 100,000 adults, making it more common than lower gastrointestinal system bleedings. Approximately 80% of acute upper gastrointestinal system bleedings are attributed to non-variceal causes. Endoscopy is an invasive procedure used for diagnosis and treatment in upper gastrointestinal system bleedings. . In recent years, there has been an increase in endoscopy and endoscopic treatment rates. Except for variceal bleedings, most upper gastrointestinal system bleedings stop without the need for endoscopic intervention. However, some patients require endoscopic intervention and identifying this high-risk group, prone to recurrent bleeding, through non-invasive tests is crucial. In investigators' prospective study, researcher aimed to facilitate the identification of patients who require intervention and undergo endoscopic intervention (e.g., epinephrine injection, hemoclips, thermal coagulation, argon plasma coagulation, etc.) among those who underwent endoscopy within the first 24 hours after admission to the hospital's emergency department with a diagnosis of non-variceal acute upper gastrointestinal system bleeding. Investigators sought to achieve this by determining the relevant parameters related to their clinical and laboratory findings, comorbidities, and demographic characteristics at the time of admission. This approach aims to reduce hospital admissions, hospital stay, and costs, and particularly to minimize interventional procedures during seizures and decrease complications.As of August 2022, patients who applied to the Ankara Bilkent City Hospital emergency department were followed up.
Calcium is a life saving medicine in the care of parturients. It has many important uses including treatment of hypocalcemia, treatment of magnesium toxicity, prevention of hypocalcemia during blood transfusion (of citrate containing blood products), treatment of hyperkalemia, and others. Recent clinical trials also suggest that calcium given after cord clamping may decrease blood loss in patients undergoing cesarean delivery. 2 FDA approved forms of calcium can be given intravenously: calcium chloride and calcium gluconate. Over the last decade there have been times with drug shortages of either calcium chloride or calcium gluconate. So there have been and likely will continue to be times when one formulation or the other may not be adequately available. Despite the importance of calcium and the frequency in which it is used in parturients, there are no published studies in parturients to determine dose equivalence between calcium gluconate and calcium chloride. In this study the investigators will determine the population pharmacokinetics of calcium gluconate and calcium chloride in parturients and calculate the dose equivalent ratio the two drugs. This will help clinicians select appropriate doses of calcium and provide resilience to the drug supply chain in our era of frequent drug shortages.
The rate of heavy blood loss is higher in Cesarean delivery compared to vaginal deliveries. Since postpartum hemorrhage is a life threatening situation to decrease the maternal mortality and morbidity rates, precautions should be taken. In this study, we aim to decrease the amount of postpartum hemorrhage by clamping the uterine artery after the delivery of the baby during Cesarean delivery.
During nasotracheal intubation, nasopharyngeal trauma and associated bleeding may occur. The investigators think that some of this bleeding is due to trauma to the posterior wall of the nasopharynx. The investigators designed this study, thinking that if nasopharyngeal posterior wall trauma can be prevented, some of these bleedings can be prevented.
The incidence of bleeding during ERCP and following ERCP has been estimated using retrospective sources, but granular predictors of bleeding remain unknown, including the use of direct-acting anticoagulants and discontinuation and resumption patterns surrounding their use. In this study, we will aim to assess the incidence and predictors of intra-procedural bleeding during ERCP, and clinically significant post-procedural bleeding following ERCP.
This study was planned to determine the effect of simulation-based postpartum hemorrhage management on the application skills, satisfaction, self-confidence and self-efficacy-competences of Health Sciences University Hamidiye Health Sciences Faculty Midwifery Department 3rd year students. The research, which was planned in a randomized controlled experimental design, will be conducted with Istanbul Health Sciences University Hamidiye Health Sciences Faculty 3rd year midwifery (N:82) students. Students participating in the study will be divided into intervention (n:41) and control (n:41) groups according to the computer-assisted simple random sampling technique. Before the application, both groups will be given 2 hours of theoretical information on the evaluation and management of postpartum hemorrhage. 41 students assigned to the intervention group will be given a high-fidelity simulator, and 41 students assigned to the control group will be given practical training accompanied by an adult standard patient care model. "Descriptive Information Form", "Evaluation of Simulation-Based Learning Scale", "Student Satisfaction and Self-Confidence in Learning Scale", "Self-Efficacy Scale" and "Early Postpartum Hemorrhage Management Skill Evaluation Form" will be applied to the students participating in the research.
More than 80% of patients with upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) are hospitalized after their visit to the emergency department (ED). However, some of these hospitalizations do not seem justified. Several clinical scores have been developed to classify patients according to their risk of death or need for therapeutic intervention. The aims of this study are: 1. to describe the characteristics of patients hospitalized for UGIB after their visit to the ED 2. to assess the predictive factors of hospital intervention or death 3. to assess the accuracy of existing prognostic scores to classify patients according their risk of death or need for therapeutic intervention (external validation) and to identify low-risk patients not requiring intervention. 4. Depending on the results, a new score could be derived to identify patients at low risk for intervention or death.
Carbetocin is an oxytocin receptor agonist that selectively binds to receptors in the smooth muscle of the uterus, stimulates rhythmic contractions of the uterus, increases the frequency of existing contractions, and raises the tone of the uterine musculature. Carbetocin is approved in >100 countries for the prevention of postpartum hemorrhage due to uterine atony in women following cesarean or vaginal delivery. Per regulatory requirements, the current trial will evaluate the effects of high clinical exposure of carbetocin on the QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc) as measured by ECG in healthy men and women.
Tranexamic acid is a medication used to treat or prevent excessive blood loss during surgery. Previous studies have shown tranexamic acid (TXA) reduces blood loss and post-operative blood transfusion rate without significant complications. In addition, many meta-analyses have confirmed these results. This study also aims to determine how safe and effective tranexamic acid treatment is for different patients undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty.
In patients who show signs of bleeding and bleeding after polypectomy such as EMR and ESD for polyps with a diameter of 2 cm or more in the lower gastrointestinal tract, the effectiveness and safety of Nexpowder as an endoscopic hemostatic treatment are confirmed.