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Premature Neonate clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03705468 Completed - Premature Neonate Clinical Trials

Assessment of Ketamine and Propofol Sedation During LISA Method (Less Invasive Surfactant Administration)

ANALISA
Start date: September 19, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) caused by surfactant deficiency remains one of the major reasons of morbi-mortality in preterm infants and affects 85% of preterm babies born less than 32 week gestational age (wGA). The strategy to manage RDS relies on the use of surfactant and non-invasive nasal ventilation, to limit tracheal mechanical ventilation. During recent years, surfactant administration through a thin catheter in spontaneously breathing preterm used in association with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) has emerged as a new approach for treating neonates with respiratory failure. The main objectives of Less Invasive Surfactant Administration (LISA) are to avoid endotracheal mechanical ventilation and its side effects including bronchopulmonary dysplasia. The LISA premedication procedure still under debate, because only 1 trial use analgesia or sedation during procedure. This reflects neonatologists concerns about side effects (apnea and the need for mechanical ventilation) of this premedication. This study aims to optimize sedation during LISA procedure by evaluating pain score with Ketamine or Protofol sedation, in Neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) patients with RDS.

NCT ID: NCT02919540 Completed - Premature Neonate Clinical Trials

Effect of "Kangaroo Mother Care" on Premature Infants Physiological Outcomes

Start date: September 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This project aims at testing the effect of applying the KMC on the premature infants' physiological outcomes. The findings of this project are expected to contribute to the discipline of preterm infants' care by providing evidence of the benefits, barriers, and facilities of providing the KMC in our Jordanian NICUs.

NCT ID: NCT02799875 Completed - Premature Neonate Clinical Trials

Late Permissive Hypercapnia for Intubated and Ventilated Preterm Infants

HYFIVE
Start date: December 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Preterm infants, less than 37 weeks gestation with respiratory distress syndrome, who remain ventilated between 7 and 14 days after birth will be randomized to a ventilator strategy of either a higher level of permissive hypercapnia or of a lower level of permissive hypercapnia to determine if either strategy will increase the number of alive ventilator-free days in the 28 days after randomization.