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Hip Fracture clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02774148 Terminated - Hip Fracture Clinical Trials

Pain Control in Elderly Hip Fracture Patients: Is Intravenous Acetaminophen Superior to Oral Administration?

Start date: December 2016
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The primary objective is to determine if intravenous acetaminophen decreases pain scores and the amount of morphine equivalence received as compared to oral acetaminophen in patients greater than 65 years old after sustaining a hip fracture.

NCT ID: NCT02689388 Terminated - Delirium Clinical Trials

Evaluating the Addition of Regional Analgesia to Reduce Postoperative Delirium in Patients Having Hip Fracture Surgery.

RASAPOD
Start date: August 28, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Post operative delirium is common after hip fracture surgery and is associated with increased length of hospital stay, delayed recovery and increased mortality. Postoperative delirium can also decrease a patient's quality of life and increase treatment costs. Anesthesia and pain relief (analgesia) treatments may also influence the incidence of delirium, but more research is needed into which techniques are effective in improving patient outcomes, care and decreasing costs. This pilot study compares the addition of regional analgesia as part of general anesthesia to determine the incidence of delirium following hip surgery. This is a collaborative study involving anesthesia, orthopedic surgery and geriatrics in the improvement of patient care.

NCT ID: NCT02673892 Terminated - Clinical trials for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Patient Oriented Discharge Summary Impact Study

PODS
Start date: February 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Improving the patient experience has become a major focus of quality improvement efforts in Ontario and in health systems worldwide. However, our existing knowledge base is relatively under-developed, particularly in how patients experience care as they transition from one care setting to another and the relationship between patient experience and clinical outcomes. The Patient Oriented Discharge Summary (PODS) is a discharge instruction tool created by patients, caregivers, health-care providers and design experts. It provides a written template for providers to engage patients and caregivers when reviewing important instructions on medications, activity and diet restrictions, follow-up appointments and worrisome symptoms warranting emergency care following admission to hospital. The PODS also uses plain and simple wording, large fonts, pictograms, and includes white space for patients to take notes and provides the option for translation of major headings into the most common spoken languages. The PODS impact study will study the impact of using the PODS versus usual discharge instructions on patient experience and health outcomes in a provincial-wide randomized study across acute care and rehabilitation hospitals.

NCT ID: NCT02248870 Terminated - Hip Fracture Clinical Trials

Femoral Nerve Block With Bupivacaine and Adjuvant Dexamethasone in Patients With Hip Fracture

Start date: March 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Prolongation of the analgesic effect of a femoral nerve block from the present 15 hours to 24 hours in patients with hip fracture would have a major impact in order to provide better preoperative analgesia for this group. In other trials concerning other nerves then the femoral nerve the addition of Dexamethasone to the local anesthetics doubled the analgesic duration. No studies has investigated the effect of the addition of Dexamethasone to the femoral nerve block in patients with hip fracture. The aim of our study is to investigate if more patients with hip fracture experience lasting preoperative analgesia until the time of operation or 20 hours after a femoral nerve block with the addition of Dexamethasone compared to the same nerve block done without Dexamethasone.

NCT ID: NCT01667913 Terminated - Hip Fracture Clinical Trials

Reliability of 6-Minutes Walking Test in Hip Fracture Patients

Start date: September 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to examine the relative (ICC) and absolute intertester reliability of the 6-Minutes Walking Test in hip fracture patients (N=50) in an outpatient facility. The data collection is conducted by two physiotherapists, who are blinded to each other. The physiotherapists are randomized so they each are doing an equal number of baseline tests.

NCT ID: NCT01535781 Terminated - Anemia Clinical Trials

Study of the Effect of Tranexamic Acid Administered to Patients With Hip Fractures. Can Blood Loss be Reduced?

Start date: September 2011
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The effect of Tranexamic acid on blood loss, hemoglobin and transfusions in patients with pertrochanteric hip fractures. Tranexamic acid is a well known drug used in many types of surgery. The investigators wish to investigate if the use of tranexamic acid can reduce the peri- and post-operative blood loss in patients who undergo surgery with a short intramedullary nail, for a pertrochanteric hip fracture. An interim analysis was planned when reaching 60 inclusions. The interim analysis was conducted only on the primary outcome (TBL). A difference in TBL of no less than 500 ml was considered a reason to halt the study. The 0.001 level was chosen as a simple approach to this interim analysis from the Haybittle-Peto boundary

NCT ID: NCT01505985 Terminated - Hip Fracture Clinical Trials

Hip Fracture Surgery and Oral Nutritional Supplements

HIATUS
Start date: January 2012
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Senior hip fracture patients are the most vulnerable to malnutrition and protein deficiency. Low protein intake, like vitamin D deficiency, contribute to an increased risk for hip fracture. Notably, several clinical trials with protein supplementation in senior hip fracture patients resulted in fewer deaths, shorter hospital stay, and a higher likelihood of return to independent living. The proposal is to test the effect of an oral nutritional supplement (ONS) which has been designed to meet the specific nutrient needs of senior bone and muscle health. The hypothesis is that this ONS will improve functional recovery after hip fracture (as measured by Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB)), improve quality of life, improve muscle mass, and- decrease falls and hospital re-admission after hip fracture.

NCT ID: NCT01494090 Terminated - Hip Fracture Clinical Trials

Statin in Hip Fracture

STAFF
Start date: August 2011
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Statins (or HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors) have largely proven their efficacy in the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular events. Many clinical and experimental studies support also a potential beneficial effect of statin therapy on venous thromboembolism (VTE). Patients with hip fracture are at high risk of VTE and cardiovascular events. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and the tolerance of a statin (rosuvastatin) in hip fracture surgery on the occurrence of venous and atherothrombotic events and the global mortality at six months. Subjects aged 60 years or over who are scheduled to undergo surgery for fracture of the upper portion of the femur (hip fracture) are eligible to participate to this multicentre, randomized, double-blind placebo controlled trial. They will receive either rosuvastatin (5 or 20 mg) or placebo for 6 months. The primary efficacy outcome is the incidence of an adjudicated composite of non fatal VTE, acute coronary syndrome, non fatal stroke, other acute ischemic arterial event, or all-cause death. Assuming a endpoint frequency of 20% in the control group, we calculated that 1200 patients will be required for the study to have 80% power to detect a 30% reduction in the relative risk with rosuvastatin (with a two-sided alpha level of 5%). The investigators assumed that rosuvastatin could have a positive benefit-risk ratio in patients undergoing orthopaedic surgery for hip fracture, by reducing vascular events and global mortality at six months.

NCT ID: NCT00286936 Terminated - Delirium Clinical Trials

Incidence of Delirium in Hip Fracture Patients Randomized to Regular Hypnotics vs Placebo

Start date: February 2004
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To examine the influence of regular hypnotic therapy on the incidence of delirium after hip fracture surgery

NCT ID: NCT00128115 Terminated - Hip Fracture Clinical Trials

Treatment of Sarcopenia in Post-Hip Fracture Patients (0677-032)

Start date: September 2005
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to demonstrate an improvement in physical functional recovery, following administration of Drug for 24 weeks, in patients who have recently experienced a hip fracture. This study will also evaluate the safety and tolerability of Drug. This is an early phase trial and some specific protocol information is proprietary and not publicly available at this time. (Full information is available to trial participants).