View clinical trials related to Metabolic Acidosis.
Filter by:At times patients with advanced renal failure present with severe hyperkalemia or acidosis and very high serum blood urea nitrogen (BUN) concentrations. These patients cannot be dialyzed aggressively as the lowering of serum BUN may results in disequilibrium syndrome but on the other hand they need aggressive dialysis in order to lower their serum potassium or fix their severe acidosis. If one is able to add urea to the dialysis fluid, one can prevent the rapid lowering of serum BUN and osmolality at the same time as doing aggressive dialysis to lower serum potassium and/or fix the metabolic acidosis.
This is the first and only study conducted on the use of capnography in children diagnosed with DKA to evaluate the initial clinical grading of DKA, monitor clinical improvement, and predict complications such as brain edema.
With this research the investigators want to study how patients with chronic kidney disease respond to different sodium- and potassium salts. Potassium salts can prevent kidney damage and cardiovascular disease, however patients with chronic kidney disease can responds differently. Extra potassium can increase the amount of potassium in the blood and extra chloride can cause acidosis. With this study the investigators will gain more insight in how patients with chronic kidney disease respond to sodium and potassium salts and which one is more favorable.This information can then be used to guide the application of salt substitutes and dietary adjustments in patients with chronic kidney disease.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about and test the effect of an acid/base diet, in chronic kidney patients with CKD stage 4 and 5 in an interventional study with a historical control. The hypothesize is, that an acid/base diet will reduce the degree of acidosis and the need for oral bicarbonate supplements.
The relationship of developing metabolic acidosis with antiepleptic drugs in craniotomy operations
The aim of the study is to investigate the effects of ADVOS® therapy in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury, necessity of renal replacement therapy and acidosis. The investigators aim at assessing superiority of ADVOS® versus CVVHD for the primary outcome hours alive with normal pH (arterial pH ≤ 7,35) until 24 hours in a modified intention-to-treat analysis (mITT: replacement if dropped out before treatment start).
This clinical trial aims to investigate and test the effect of an acid/base diet in chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, CKD stage 4 and 5. The trial is guided by the hypothesis that an acid/base diet will reduce the degree of acidosis and simultaneously reduce the need for bicarbonate supplements.
This trial aims to assess if, among adults in the ICU with metabolic acidosis, an infusion of sodium bicarbonate diluted in 5% dextrose, compared with an infusion of 5% dextrose, reduces Major Adverse Kidney Events within 30 days of randomization.
Investigating lactate metabolism in critically ill patients whom are hypoperfused by preforming metabolomics via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry.
ST-analysis of the foetal ECG (STAN®) is another second line technique for intrapartum foetal monitoring. Combining ST-analysis with standard CTG interpretation aims to identify hypoxic foetuses more accurately than CTG alone. The STAN® method identifies changes in the ST-interval of the foetal ECG that occur in the presence of foetalcentral hypoxia The aim of this studie is to investigate if the foetal lactate blood sampling is still useful when STAN® monitoring is already being used as a second line technique for intrapartum foetal monitoring if the fetal heart rate is abnormal without a significant ST event Nowadays in the Montpellier hospital's protocol, the investigators have to check the value of lactate sampling in case of le STAN doesn't detect an ST event. So this studie can change the Montpellier hospital's protocol and avoid useless fetal blood sampling