View clinical trials related to Hypotension.
Filter by:The goal of this pragmatic, multi-center, superiority, randomized clinical trial is to compare early treatment with peripheral (through a vein) infused noradrenaline (a natural hormone that increases blood pressure) with fluid only therapy in patients with hypotensive and shock in the Danish Emergency Departments (ED). The main questions it aims to answer are: If early initiated noradrenaline in non-bleeding hypotensive patients presenting in the ED can - Improve time to shock control. - Reduce the need for ICU admittance. - Decrease mortality. Participants will be included by the clinical staff and treated urgently with either noradrenaline or usual treatment during their Emergency Department stay. After completion of the treatment in the Emergency Department, patient data will be extracted from the bed-side measurements, electronic health records and national registers. Patients will be contacted by the research staff 1 year after study inclusion to answer brief questions about their daily physical function and ability to care for themselves. Researchers will compare with patients receiving fluid therapy only, as this is the usual standard of care in Danish Emergency Departments.
To assess the dose responsiveness of ringer lactate solution in prevention of post-induction hypotension predicted by Ultrasound guided Inferior Vena Cava diameter in patients receiving General anesthesia. OBJECTIVES Primary - To find the optimum preloading dosage of Ringer Lactate to prevent post induction hypotension. Secondary - To find the predictive incidence of Post-induction hypotension according to age, gender, type of surgery and comorbidities.
In postoperative cardiac surgery under extracorporeal circulation, the patient may develop a vasoplegic syndrome, characterized by arterial hypotension (mean arterial pressure (MAP) < 65 mmHg); a decrease in vascular resistance and a cardiac output that may be normal or increased, and increased postoperative mortality/ International recommendations recommend the prescription of noradrenaline as a first-line treatment to reduce morbidity and mortality. However, excess norepinephrine or duration of exposure is also deleterious. The Acumen IQ device (Edwards Lifesciences) allows the calculation of a predictive index of arterial hypotension episodes (predictive hypotension index, HPI). HPI could improve norepinephrine weaning by preventing episodes of arterial hypotension or detecting preload dependence, thus avoiding the transient increase in norepinephrine during hypotension. This is a single-center, prospective, open-label, randomized, controlled, 2-group, parallel, intention-to-treat study. The aim was to evaluate the superiority of a new decision algorithm, based on the HPI delivered by the Acumen IQ device, to reduce the duration of norepinephrine administration in post-cardiac surgery vasoplegic shock. The duration of the interventional protocol is 72 hours. To evaluate the clinical impact of the protocol, the time of the study will be 30 days. Several follow-up visits will be performed (end-of-protocol day, discharge day, and at D30 of inclusion) to collect clinical, biological, and HPI monitoring data.
The purpose of this research is to determine the efficacy of paraspinal vein embolization for treatment of digital subtraction myelography (DSM) or CT myelography (CTM) confirmed cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-venous fistulas so that researchers can inform the development and design of future clinical trials of this technique.
Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension (nOH) is a chronic condition associated with increased cardiovascular risk and reduced quality of life. On standing, patients with nOH experience a large reduction in blood pressure (BP; at least ≥20/10mmHg, but often much more), which is often accompanied by debilitating symptoms and syncope. A previous study (unpublished) showed that hypercapnia significantly increases standing BP in patients with nOH. Human bodies naturally produce and exhale CO2. Rebreathe devices offer a simple, cost-effective technology to increase arterial CO2. In brief, rebreathe devices work by capturing expired CO2, which is then re-inhaled. The net effect is a transient increase in CO2. A CO2 rebreathing device may offer a novel hemodynamic therapy for patients with nOH. This is a pilot, proof-of-concept study to evaluate a CO2 rebreather to improve blood pressure and orthostatic tolerance in patients with nOH. The hypothesis is that a rebreather will increase CO2 sufficiently enough to improve BP in patients with nOH. Male and female patients (n=28) will be asked to complete two randomized 70° head-up tilt (HUT) tests breathing either room air or using a CO2 rebreather. Hemodynamics (BP, heart rate, stroke volume, brain blood flow) and orthostatic symptoms will be assessed throughout. Breath-by-breath data will include O2, CO2, respiration rate and tidal volume. The primary outcome measure will be the magnitude of the BP response (ΔBP = HUT - Supine) during Room Air vs. Hypercapnia. The primary outcome will be compared between room air and hypercapnia using a paired t-test.
The purpose of this pilot trial is to examine the feasibility and ease of use of monitoring by ClearSight in laboring and delivering patients with the intent to compare time-to-treatment of hypotension between conventionally monitored patients (Group CM) and those receiving HPI (Group CM + HPI) monitoring by ClearSight, in a population of healthy laboring women who receive epidural analgesia.
Intradialytic hypotension (IDH) is defined as less than the 5th percentile of SBP measurements and is associated with clinical symptoms, such as abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, muscle cramps, restlessness, light-headedness, syncope, and anxiety. In adults There is no consensus definition of IDH, however, according to the Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative and European Best Practice Guidelines, IDH is defined as a decline in systolic blood pressure ≥20 mmHg or a decrease in a mean arterial pressure by 10 mmHg and associated with clinical events like abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, muscle cramps, dizziness, fatigue, and restlessness. IDH occurs in response to the reduction in blood volume (BV) during ultrafiltration (UF) and subsequent poor compensatory mechanisms due to abnormal cardiac function (left ventricular dysfunction, chamber remodeling, congenital heart diseases, and arrhythmias) or autonomic or baroreceptor failure. To maintain volume status, the body shifts fluid from the interstitial space to the intravascular space and increases heart rate, contractility, and vascular tone. Plasma refilling, another essential factor in maintaining euvolemia, depends on oncotic, osmotic, and hydraulic gradients across vascular beds. If UF rates surpass plasma refilling rates, intravascular volume falls and hypotension results. Hematocrit levels, tissue hydration and arterial vasoconstriction all promote plasma refilling rates. Alterations in these factors during dialysis decrease the plasma refilling rate, resulting in hypotension. Aim of The Work: The aim of this study is to assess and evaluate the efficacy and safety of L Carnitine in the prevention of intradialytic hypotension in pediatric patients on regular hemodialysis.
In this study, a wristband that monitors hearth rhythm and blood pressure is assessed in free living conditions. Two groups of patients are being recruited: patients receiving an EKG holter and patients receiving an automatic blood pressure monitor. Patients wear the wristband for 28 days. During this time, the number of atrial fibrillation episodes detected by the wristband is being counted, which is to be compared with the number of episodes detected by the holter. Also, blood pressure is measured continuously, which is to be compared with daily blood pressure measurements using a conventional blood pressure cuff.
The aim of our study is to determine the predictive value of pre-anesthesia FTc for hypotension that may develop after general anesthesia induction in patients over 65 years of age and to investigate the correlation between pre-anesthesia FTc and the magnitude of the maximum decrease in systolic blood pressure from the pre-anaesthetic value.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about Whether carotid ultrasound guided fluid management can reduce the incidence of hypotension after general anesthesia induction in elderly patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: Whether fluid therapy reduces the incidence of general anaesthesia induced hypotension in elderly patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery. Whether carotid ultrasound can guide fluid management in elderly patients undergoing gastrointestinal surgery. Participants will use carotid ultrasound to assess volume status. If volume is insufficient, fluid therapy will be selected until volume is sufficient, anesthesia will be then induced. If volume is sufficient, anesthesia will be directly induced. There is a comparison group: No carotid ultrasound will be used to assess the volume status of the patients, and anesthesia will be directly induced.