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Mediastinitis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05001308 Recruiting - Mediastinitis Clinical Trials

Infectious Mediastinitis Among the Strasbourg Universitary Hospital

MEDIASTINITIS
Start date: June 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Mediastinitis are rare but serious infections, with mortality rates varying from 6 to 30% according to the literature. They are essentially linked to surgical management (cardio-thoracic in particular), but some forms can be spontaneous, after extension of an ENT infectious focus, for example. Despite their seriousness, there is no strong recommendations to define their management, especially concerning antibiotic therapy and its duration. The aim of this research is to make a descriptive analysis of the cases of mediastinitis at HUS in recent years, and to study the therapeutic strategy used

NCT ID: NCT04865003 Completed - Inflammation Clinical Trials

Prognostic Factors for Descending Necrotizing Mediastinitis Development in Deep Space Neck Infections

Start date: January 1, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Descending necrotizing mediastinitis (DNM) is the most serious complication of deep neck infections (DNI) with high mortality. The objective of this retrospective study was to evaluate possible prognostic factors for DNM development in deep space neck infections.

NCT ID: NCT04617353 Completed - Mediastinitis Clinical Trials

Combined Air-plasma Flow and Nitric Oxide Therapy in Cardiac Surgery

Start date: March 14, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In cardiovascular surgery, the most common and serious complication is postoperative wound infection. The most formidable wound complication is mediastinitis, the frequency of which varies from 1 to 3%. Currently, mortality in this group of patients varies from 3.5 to 58.3%. In this regard, the relevance of developing new methods for the prevention and treatment of infectious wound complications is beyond doubt. In this study, it is supposed to examine and evaluate the effectiveness of the combined effects of air-plasma flow and nitric oxide in the treatment of postoperative infectious complications in cardiac surgery.

NCT ID: NCT03961503 Completed - Clinical trials for Surgical Site Infection

Retrospective Analysis of Nephrotoxicity During Daptomycin Versus Vancomycin Treatments in High Risk Patients

DVN
Start date: January 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication that occurs in 15 to 25% of patients after vascular surgery, and up to 40% of patients after cardiac surgery. AKI compromises seriously short and long-term prognosis of critically ill patients. Several AKI risk factors have been identified including a chronic pathology of the patient such as kidney failure or diabetes, acute kidney injury related to hemodynamic disorders during surgery, including cardiopulmonary bypass, or sepsis, and the use of nephrotoxic agents such as some antibiotics, colloids or iodine contrast agents. Avoiding nephrotoxic agents is therefore strongly recommended in ICU patients, to reduce the incidence of AKI, or to reduce its severity. The aim of this cohort study was to assess whether the use of daptomycin, was associated to a lower incidence of AKI than vancomycin in cardiovascular ICU patients, with similar efficacy. This is a retrospective observational study with a propensity score adjustment to reduce the bias of selection for a comparative analysis between two antibacterial treatments used in routine care. Since treatments were not randomized, the investigators used the propensity score method for primary endpoint analysis. For this, the investigators included the covariates potentially related to treatment and outcome in a multivariate logistic model explaining the choice of treatment. This propensity score was used in the second model as an adjustment covariate included in the multivariate analysis to determine factors independently associated with the primary endpoint (AKI within 7 days). The main hypothesis is the first line antibiotic treatment with daptomycin leads to less nephrotoxicity than vancomycin in a population known at high risk for AKI and with at least a similar efficacy on clinical success rate.

NCT ID: NCT03922191 Completed - Mediastinitis Clinical Trials

Post-Surgical Mediastinitis Within the CHU Brugmann Hospital

Start date: February 12, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Mediastinitis is an infectious complication that can occur after cardiac surgery. The incidence varies between 1 and 3% depending on the type of procedure and the patient's condition. The mortality of this severe postoperative complication rises from 10 to 35%, which makes it dreadful. The major risk factors reported are obesity, diabetes, and immunosuppressive therapy. There are other less important ones: age, coronary bypass grafting (especially if using the two internal mammary arteries), nosocomial pneumonia, dialysis, prolonged mechanical ventilation, long operative asepsis, undrained retro-sternally hematoma, prolonged pre-operative hospitalization...). Prevention is very important. The principle of asepsis must absolutely be respected. The use of prophylactic antibiotic therapy is recommended. The most commonly encountered organisms are Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase-negative Staphylococci and gram-negative bacilli. There are several treatment modalities that vary between centers and may be different depending on the surgical team's experience and the depth or extent of the infection. The common principles of these treatments are: antibiotic therapy and surgical debridement (the timing of which may vary). The timing and modalities of wound closure are subject to variations: immediate sternal closure with placement of multiple or delayed drains. Muscle flaps or large omentum transplant may be necessary if tissue loss is too important. The investigators propose to review their experience in the treatment of cardiac post-surgery mediastinitis at Brugmann University Hospital in the last 20 years in both adult and pediatric patients.

NCT ID: NCT03262558 Completed - Infection Clinical Trials

Mediastinitis and Staphylococcus Aureus

MEDIASTAPH
Start date: July 4, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Cardiac surgery with extracorporeal circulation (ECC) yields a deep immune system dysfunction that exposes patients to postoperative infectious complications. Among these, post-operative mediastinitis with Staphylococcus aureus (SA) generates significant morbidity and mortality. Two radically different approaches have been proposed in recent years to reduce the incidence of this complication. A first approach has attempted, without real success, to decrease postoperative immunosuppression. The second, more efficient, consisted of screening and preoperatively treating patients colonized with SA. However, although its incidence has decreased, postoperative mediastinitis remains a terrible nosocomial infection. The authors believe that a thorough analysis of the immunological changes induced by cardiac surgery will initiate active therapeutics to reduce the post-operative immunosuppression phase, thereby decreasing the risk of nosocomial infections. In addition, a study of the interactions between the operated (host) and staphylococcus aureus (pathogenic) immune systems will provide a better understanding of the mechanisms that expose patients to this bacterium.

NCT ID: NCT02513576 Completed - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Physiotherapy Exercises in Patients With Sternal Instability After Cardiovascular Surgery

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

Sternal instability caused by mediastinitis is one of the most feared complications for cardiac surgery team for generating large commitments and functional damages to patients. Biomechanically, the contraction of abdominal muscles such as transverse abdominal, produces forces that result in a "corset-like" action and anterior thoracic cage muscles too may assist in stabilizing the sternum. Thus, strengthening the abdominal muscles might contribute to the recovery of functional aspects. The aim was to evaluate whether contraction and strengthening the abdominal muscles could improve lung function and respiratory muscle strength in patients with sternal instability.

NCT ID: NCT02073760 Completed - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Optimizing Prevention of Healthcare-Acquired Infections After Cardiac Surgery (HAI)_2

Start date: June 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The investigators will conduct qualitative interviews of hospital personnel regarding HAI prevention practices, and use coded data from these interviews to assist in developing standardized practices.

NCT ID: NCT01473979 Not yet recruiting - Mediastinitis Clinical Trials

Delayed Primary Versus Late Secondary Wound Closure in Sternum Infections

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

Sternal osteomyelitis and poststernotomy mediastinitis is a severe and life-treating complication after the cardiac surgery. The incidence of sternal osteomyelitis ranges from 1% to 3% with a high mortality rate from 19% to 29% . The most devastating complication of the open sternum is the laceration of the right ventricle which has a very high mortality. Additionally destabilizations of the thoracic cage, prolonged immobilization, or substantial surgical trauma are further complications of the conventional strategy (4). In addition, postoperative infections after sternotomy are associated with prolonged hospital stay, increased healthcare costs and impaired quality of patient life, representing an economic and social burden. The emergence of increasing antimicrobial resistant bacteria augments the importance of postsurgical infections since the antimicrobial choices are becoming limited. Furthermore, the incidence of infection is an indicator for the quality of patient care in the international benchmark studies. Although several therapy strategies are nowadays present in clinical practice, there is a lack of evidence based surgical consensus for treatment of this surgical complication. In most case the poststernotomy mediastinitis is involving surgical revision with debridement, open dressing and/or vacuum assisted therapy. After the granulation tissue on open chest wound was achieved secondary closure and/or reconstruction with vascularized soft tissue flaps such as omentum or pectoral muscle is performed. It seems there is a need for more effective surgical treatment of poststernotomy wound infections, which may address the prolonged hospitalization and reduce number of surgical interventions and with this also perioperative morbidity. In light of this we propose a randomized study comparing new delay primary closure of the sternum to the secondary vacuum assisted closure.

NCT ID: NCT00876551 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Esophageal Neoplasms

Endoscopic-vacuum Assisted Closure of Intrathoracic Postsurgical Leaks

EVACoIL
Start date: January 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the short and long term outcome of endoscopic vacuum assisted closure of intrathoracic postsurgical leaks.