View clinical trials related to Obstruction.
Filter by:To investigate the effectiveness of percutaneous nephrostomy catheter placement versus retrograde double J catheter placement in patients with symptoms of obstructive kidney disease (with either infection and/or pain and/or kidney function deterioration) caused by urolithiasis.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a frequent cardiac pathology with an estimated prevalence of 1/500 in France. The main risk factor for sudden death in this pathology is the presence and extent of left ventricular obstruction. To date, the only method allowing a reliable assessment of the extent of left ventricular obstruction is Doppler echocardiography. All patients with HCM should undergo cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to confirm the diagnosis and for the detection of fibrosis, but conventional sequences cannot reliably assess the obstruction. 4D-flow MRI provides a complete coverage of an entire volume with the ability to simultaneously measure the outputs of all vessels within that volume in a single sequence and might be able to quantify left ventricular obstruction. The main objective of this study is to compare the quantification of left ventricular obstruction in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy by Doppler echocardiography and 4D flow MRI.
Intravenous nutrition is an important therapy for the recovery of many patients. It is indicated when the patients cannot take food by mouth or use their intestines for feeding. It is important to indicate it in the appropriate setting because it's not free of complications and is a costly treatment. Some of the complications are: elevated blood sugar or lipids, elevated liver function tests, infection of the catheter or device used to administer intravenous nutrition. Intravenous nutrition is composed by proteins, lipids, carbohydrates (sugar in the form of glucose) and vitamins. Until recently, Intralipid, a soybean oil-based lipid emulsion was the only lipid available in Canada for this kind of nutrition. Since 2010, a new lipid emulsion (ClinOleic) based on olive-oil has been approved by Health Canada for use in intravenous nutrition. There is an increasing need for hospitals to evaluate the quality of intravenous nutrition administered to hospitalized patients in terms of: assessing indications, prescription, complications, clinical results and costs. The objective of this study is to determine if intravenous nutrition prescribed in hospitalized patients is indicated following existing guidelines in terms of timing of nutrition support, prescription, monitoring and whether it is associated with complications. In addition, length of stay and mortality will be assessed. Also, we will evaluate nutritional, infectious and inflammatory parameters in patients receiving soybean oil-based lipid emulsion (Intralipid) compared to those of patients receiving olive oil-based lipid emulsion (ClinOleic).