Clinical Trials Logo

Organ Failure clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Organ Failure.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05758246 Recruiting - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Senolytics To slOw Progression of Sepsis (STOP-Sepsis) Trial

Start date: August 23, 2023
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The long-term goal is to test the clinical efficacy of senolytic therapies to reduce progression to and severity of sepsis in older patients. The central hypothesis is that a threshold burden of SnCs predisposes to a SASP mediated dysfunctional response to PAMPs, contributing to a disproportionate burden of sepsis in older patients. The study hypothesizes timely treatment with fisetin will interrupt this pathway. A multicenter, randomized, adaptive allocation clinical trial to identify the most efficacious dose of the senolytic fisetin to reduce the composite cardiovascular, respiratory, and renal sequential organ failure assessment score at 1 week, and predict the probability of success of a definitive phase III clinical trial.

NCT ID: NCT04926220 Recruiting - Surgery Clinical Trials

Dynamic Estimation of Cardiac Output in the Operating Room

TRIPLEFLOW
Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

During major surgery, it is recommended to monitor invasive arterial blood pressure and cardiac output (CO) during hemodynamic interventions (fluid challenge or vasopressors). Esophageal Doppler is currently considered as the reference method for monitoring cardiac output in the operating room. The PRAM method (pressure recording analytical method) with the MostCareUp monitor (Vytech, Padova, Italy) and the LTIA method (long time interval analysis) allow cardiac output estimation derived from non-calibrated arterial pressure waveform analysis. Few studies have looked at relative changes in cardiac output during hemodynamic intervention with these two methods. The aim of this study is to compare the relative changes in cardiac output during hemodynamic interventions as measured using PRAM and LTIA methods, compared to esophageal Doppler.

NCT ID: NCT03793803 Completed - Organ Failure Clinical Trials

Trial of Mount Sinai Palliative Care at Home

Start date: October 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed project is a randomized controlled trial of a new home-based palliative care program for adults with serious illness and their caregivers within the Mount Sinai Health System. Potential subjects will be identified from Mount Sinai records or referred by a Mount Sinai healthcare provider. Patients will only be approached after authorization by their Mount Sinai physician. Participants who consent to enrollment will be randomized to receive the intervention (home-based palliative care program) or usual care (with their nominated Mount Sinai physician). Patients will be enrolled in the study for a minimum of 6 months. After 6 months, patients can remain in the program if there is ongoing clinical need; data collection beyond 6 months will be done on all patients through chart abstraction/ administrative claims only. Effectiveness of the intervention will be determined through assessment of patient and caregiver reported outcomes and abstraction of data from medical records and administrative claims. Impact on the following parameters will be measured: (i) Patient symptoms, quality of life, satisfaction with care, documentation of advanced directives, receipt of care consistent with preferences (ii) Caregiver burden, satisfaction with care, and depression (iii) Healthcare utilization and costs of care.

NCT ID: NCT01106300 Completed - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Study in Critical Care: Longitudinal Evaluation

MUSCLE
Start date: February 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Each year, 110,000 English/Welsh patients are admitted to Intensive Care Units (ICU). Many face prolonged disability as a result. Over two thirds have moderate-extreme limitation in their usual activity a year later, and one-third are severely affected, being unable to continue "most activities," or to live independently. Quite why known- but severe muscle wasting isn't may play an important role. We hope to find out, measuring the degree of wasting in patients, and seeking potential causes. We shall also address the mechanism of wasting, which may reflect an altered balance of activity in muscle growth pathways and those that break muscle down. We'll do this by collecting data, taking regular blood tests, scanning the leg muscles with an ultrasound machine, and analysing small muscle samples. In addition, we'll accurately and objectively measure how impaired these patients become, using specialist questionnaires, special monitoring equipment, simple walking tests and occasional special ('Cardio-Pulmonary') exercise tests. We'll try to see how badly activity is limited, and tease out whether muscle weakness plays a significant role in this. Finally, keeping muscles working (hard to do when unconscious/drowsy/bed-bound) may maintain muscle mass, so we'll see whether maintaining muscle activity using painless electrical stimulation will help.

NCT ID: NCT01042132 Completed - Clinical trials for Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome

Intramedullary Femoral Reaming, Human Study

Start date: May 2003
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To what extent the cardiopulmonary and inflammatory response is affected by initial femoral intramedullary nailing in the already traumatized and inflammatory activated patient was analyzed in the present study with the attention to survey the additional burden of this operative treatment. The patients are monitored with a pulmonary catheter, and blood samples for coagulation, fibrinolysis, complement and cytokine response are withdrawn pre-, per- and postoperatively. The study is partly randomized 1)where delayed intramedullary nailing is compared with primary nailing of the femur, and 2) a new reaming technique (RIA) is compared with a standard reaming technique (TR).

NCT ID: NCT00361725 Terminated - Severe Sepsis Clinical Trials

Comparative Study of the Protein C Pathway in Septic and Non Septic Patients With Organ Failure

Start date: March 2003
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

This is a comparative study performed in 3 groups of patients/subjects: 30 severe sepsis patients, 30 non-septic patients with organ failure, 30 healthy subjects. The only intervention is a venous blood sampling at the onset of the disease. The purpose of the study is to compare the PC pathway and expression and inflammatory genes between the 3 groups. The main hypothesis is that systemic inflammatory response and exacerbated coagulation activation are non specific of an infection as a triggering event.