View clinical trials related to Hemorrhage.
Filter by:The placenta accreta spectrum is a heterogeneous disorder due to abnormal placental invasion into the uterine wall putting at risk the lives of the patients by causing a massive hemorrhage. Its incidence is increasing due to the rise of the cesarean section. The management of this spectrum is multidisciplinary but not yet codified. Hysterectomy-caesarean, though hemostatic surgery, remains the standard Gold. Several adjuvant treatments have emerged in recent years to minimize the risk of bleeding and morbidity of these disorders including the internal-iliac prophylactic occlusion balloons. The aim of the study is to demonstrate the effect of prophylactic occlusion balloons in both uterine iliac arteries in the management of placental accreta spectrum disorders.
Low levels of serum triiodothyronine (T3) thyroid hormones (T4) are a strong predictor of mortality and poor prognosis in critical care patients. Few reports, however, have focused on neurocritical patients. Patients with severe neurological diseases often experience more complications and exhibit higher mortality rates, and many studies have provided evidence for a low T3/T4 state being an important prognostic indicator in such cases; Lieberman et al. found that 87% of individuals with severe traumatic brain injury have thyroid function below the mid-normal range. Other researchers showed that low T3 syndrome is a predictor of poor prognosis in cerebral infarction patients; their findings indicated the central hypothyroidism and disturbance of thyroid hormone metabolism were involved. Low T3 syndrome is common in patients with brain tumors and has been shown to be associated with shorter survival in glioma patients. Despite these observations, however, whether the thyroid hormone abnormalities in the critically ill are a physiological adaptation or a pathological change, and whether hormone replacement therapy (HRT) can benefit such patients, remain to be established. As acute progression ceases, thyroid hormone levels may return to normal. This may imply that thyroid hormone supplements could improve the prognosis of patients with secondary hypothyroidism. Previous clinical studies have examined the effect of thyroid HRT on patients undergoing cardiac surgery; patients with malnutrition, heart failure, or acute renal failure; and premature infants with acute respiratory distress syndrome. Most of these past studies found no significant positive effects on prognosis, and no harmful effects either. Some smaller studies have demonstrated potential promise for the use of HRT; for example, one study showed that T3 supplementation in patients undergoing cardiac surgery could lead to less need for inotropic support and better hemodynamic parameters. There are no reports of thyroid HRT improving the prognosis of neurocritical patients with secondary hypothyroidism. The application of hormone replacement therapy in the treatment of neurocritical patients with secondary hypothyroidism remains controversial. This study aims to explore the safety and effectiveness of thyroid hormone replacement therapy in patients with spontaneous intracerebral hemorrhage and concomitant secondary hypothyroidism.
This study is aimed to show effectiveness of a new suture technique to stop postpartum uterine bleeding due to uterine atony.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the role of intraoperative dexmedetomidine infusion in endovascular intervention for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Aim of the Work is To determine the significance of the placental thickness and the thickness of the uterine muscle layer at placenta attachment in the prediction of postpartum hemorrhage and to evaluate both of them as as parameters for identifying high-risk patients.
The impact of albumin administration in cirrhotics with acute variceal hemorrhage (AVH) is controversial. We aim to investigate the short-term rebleeding risk associated with albumin administration in a retrospective study of hospitalized cirrhotics with AVH with stable hemodynamics. This retrospective analysis includes clinical data of cirrhosis patients with acute variceal bleeding admitted to our hospital from January 2021 to October 2023. Propensity score matching will be performed to account for potential confounders associated with albumin use for outcome analysis. According to the outcome, patients will be divided into rebleeding group and non-rebleeding group. To investigate the impact of albumin infusion on the rebleeding risk in the propensity-matched cohort, patients will be divided into albumin user group and albumin non-user group. The primary outcome is the rebleeding risk within 30 days after discharge.
In the RoTIS study, the investigators would like to test the robotic stabilizer for the subretinal injection of tPA in patients with subretinal hemorrhage during standard-of-care surgery. The surgical devices used during this procedure will be the following: - The robotic stabilizer (prototype - FAMHP approval received) - 41G subretinal needle (CE marked - used within label) - Inicio micro-injection system (CE marked - used within label) The Inicio system mounted with the 41G needle will be held by the robot, and guided by the surgeon towards the required position. When the tip of the needle is in the desired subretinal position, the robotic stabilizer will be locked and the tPA will be injected till sufficient subretinal bleb formation is obtained, with a maximal duration of up to 3 minutes. As performed routinely, the surgical view through the microscope will be video-recorded and while the injection is being administered, the built-in iOCT of the Artevo surgical microscope (Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany) will be used to scan the retina area around the injection site to record the subretinal bleb formation for later review.
The goal of this clinical trial is to Explore and verify whether 40Hz audio and binaural beat 40Hz audio can improve the postoperative cognitive dysfunction seen in patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. This study is a single-center, prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial. Patients with aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage were selected and randomized into intervention group (audio adjuvant group) and control group (conventional treatment group). Patients in the intervention group will receive audio therapy after surgery, and patients in the control group will receive usual care. EEG, fMRI and mRS scores were evaluated after 3 months of follow-up.
Tranexamic acid (TXA) is a fibrinolytic inhibitor which prevents prolonged bleeding by interfering with fibrin clot breakdown by competitively binding to lysine receptors on plasminogen; this prevents the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin. TXA will be applied to a randomly assigned side of the face during facelift surgery. The intervention groups will include 1% TXA mixed with standard local consisting 1/4% lidocaine with 1:100,000 epinephrine, 3% TXA on TXA-soaked pledgets applied for 10 minutes, and 1% TXA with local plus 3% TXA-soaked pledgets. Each treatment arm will be compared to saline in place of TXA on the contralateral side of the face. Although TXA has been widely used in surgical fields for decades and is officially recommended by agencies such as ACOG for use during maternal hemorrhage, its current FDA approval only pertains to oral TXA for heavy menstrual bleeding and IV use for patients with hemophilia to prevent or reduce hemorrhage (cite). The main concern with intravenous TXA is the increased risk for the potential formation of blood clots, mainly in patients with clotting disorders, such as Facor V Leiden, and patients on estrogen containing medication. A recent systemic review with metanalysis by Wang et.al contained a total of 2150 patients receiving IV TXA while undergoing plastic surgery concluded that use of IV TXA does not lead to increased adverse events.[12] Given the low rate of adverse events while using TXA systemically, this protocol's application of TXA topically and/or locally negates the risk for any potential systemic adverse effects. No systemic adverse effects have been reported in studies examining local TXA in facial plastic surgery to date.
Gastrointestinal bleeding is a condition that frequently presents to emergency departments and can be fatal if diagnosis and treatment are delayed. The working mechanism of end tidal capnography is simply to detect the respiratory carbon dioxide level. In our study, the investigators aimed to determine the severity of gastrointestinal bleeding by using the Glaskow Blachford Score and AIMS65 score in cases presenting with gastrointestinal bleeding, to determine the end tidal carbon dioxide value by capnography in these cases and to determine its effectiveness in evaluating mortality and morbidity in gastrointestinal bleeding.