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Pulmonary Hemorrhage clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03676023 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Hemorrhage

Tranexamic Acid Per Inhalation for Treatment of Pulmonary Hemorrhage in Pediatric Patients

Start date: March 1, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Pulmonary hemorrhage can be severe and life-threatening. In children, etiologies of pulmonary hemorrhage include respiratory infection, foreign bodies, bronchiectasis, pulmonary vascular disorders, parenchymal lung disease, and post-surgical complications. Initial management of pulmonary hemorrhage includes stabilization of the patient, securing the airway, initiative high positive end-expiratory pressure to attempt to tamponade the source of hemorrhage and repletion with blood products. Following stabilization of the patient, investigation and further management of hemorrhage includes bronchoscopy, surgery, or catheterization. Sources of bleeding such as endobronchial lesions are often identified and managed with bronchoscopy and the instillation of vasoactive medications or cold water to induce vasospasm and/or balloon tamponade. Vascular bleeding can be surgically ligated or embolized via catheterization. Unidentifiable bleeding occurs with distal vascular injury and is limited to attempted catheter guided embolization of bleeding vessels if found, supportive treatment, and correction of a coagulopathy if present. As etiologies of pulmonary hemorrhage vary, outcomes and prognosis in pediatric pulmonary hemorrhage are difficult to determine, however, mortality still remains a risk. Tranexamic acid (TXA) is a lysine analog that blocks the conversion of plasminogen to plasmin and the interaction with fibrin, preventing blood clot breakdown, thereby reducing bleeding. The United States (US) Food and Drug Administration approved the intravenous formulation of TXA for the treatment of bleeding patients with hemophilia in 1986 and the oral formulation for the use of severe menorrhagia in 2009. In 2011, The World Health Organization listed TXA as an essential medication based on its successful use in adult trauma-related hemorrhage. Studies show the successful off-label use of TXA in children for congenital heart surgery, orthopedic procedures, neurosurgical procedures, trauma, immune thrombocytopenic purpura, epistaxis, hemorrhage complicating a procedure, bilateral lung transplantation, chemotherapy injections, and bone marrow biopsies among other diagnoses and procedures. Very little data on the use of TXA for pediatric pulmonary hemorrhage exists. Only two case reports show TXA controlling hemoptysis in children with cystic fibrosis-related hemoptysis. A systematic review concluded that the use of TXA for hemoptysis was associated with a significant reduction in length of bleeding. A recent randomized control trial showed the TXA decreased the severity of the hemoptysis and may be used as a bridge to other interventions. The powerful anti-fibrinolytic properties and relatively low side-effect profile lend TXA to the off-label use in children to reduce bleeding in other diagnoses. There are not enough studies and data, however, to recommend the routine use of TXA in hemoptysis.

NCT ID: NCT01860014 Completed - Clinical trials for Pulmonary Hemorrhage

Comparison of Two Different Natural Surfactants in the Treatment of Pulmonary Hemorrhage

Start date: March 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The incidence of pulmonary hemorrhage (PH) was about 1.3 per 1,000 live births. PH occurs mainly in preterm ventilated infants with severe respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) who often have a PDA and have received surfactant. Although not clear, the cause of PH is thought to be due to a rapid lowering of intrapulmonary pressure, which facilitates left to right shunting across a patent ductus arteriosus and an increase in pulmonary blood flow. Prospective uncontrolled studies that used surfactant for PH in neonates have shown promising results in treating PH.In this study we aimed to evaluate the effect of two different natural surfactants in neonates with pulmonary hemorrhage.