View clinical trials related to Renal Failure.
Filter by:The purpose of this research study is to find out the safety and effectiveness of a new medical device called H-Guard. During this research study, participants will receive the standard of care haemodialysis treatment, as decided by the treating doctor. Participants will be observed during 5-6 haemodialysis treatments throughout the course of the study. The only change to the treatment process, will be the use of the medical device (H-Guard) to prime the dialysis system, before one of the treatments. Participants will have various blood tests taken throughout the course of the study for safety and research analysis.
The purpose of this study is to map the population of stage 4 and 5 kidney failure patients followed in consultation by the CHSF nephrology team and to determine the factors associated with recurrent hospitalizations.
Development, feasibility testing and validation of a Survey Set to Measure Patient-Reported Outcomes among Hemodialysis Patients in Turkey: Creating and testing an electronic patient questionnaire that is suitable to measure health-related quality of life in Turkish dialysis patients in clinical as well as in home care settings.
Kidney transplantation is the preferred treatment for end-stage renal disease. Alongside limited availability of donors, rejection and premature graft loss are main barriers to kidney transplantation. Donor-specific antibodies pre-transplantation may arise due to to prior solid organ transplantation, pregnancy or blood transfusions. Their presence is considered a risk of graft failure. The impact of DSA is differently reported in literature, also according to the technique by which DSA have been measured. Techniques such as the complement-dependent cytotoxicity crossmatch, the immunofluorescence crossmatch and the Luminex Single Antigen Bead have different sensitivities for detecting DSA. Historically, our kidney transplant program has been advocating living donor transplantation and as a result the majority of transplantations are with a living donor. In this context and in the absence of a compatible living donor, pretransplant DSA have not been considered an absolute contra-indication for transplantation. The aim of the current study is to determine the effect of DSAs on rejection and death-censored graft survival in living donor kidney transplantation. Participants are adults who underwent a living donor kidney transplantation between 2010 and 2019 in the presence of DSA. Control subjects are both immunized and non-immunized kidney transplant recipients in the same period. This is a retrospective, case control study. Death-censored graft survival is analyzed for all patients and compared by presence of DSA and other predicting variables, such as immunization level, age, sex and HLA mismatches. Furthermore, biopsy proven rejection, patient survival, kidney function, length of hospital stay and proteinuria are analyzed. Also, a predefined subgroup analysis is performed in the DSA positive patients. These are compared according to amount, strength and HLA-class of DSAs.
Investigators will conduct a pragmatic randomized trial to investigate the non-inferiority of restricted use of invasive arterial lines compared to standard arterial line use.
The investigators propose to determine the impact of high-protein beverages on protein status and inflammation markers among CKD patients undergoing hemodialysis. A 12-week double-blind randomized cross-over trial will be used in which participants (n=22) will consume a 4-ounce high protein supplement with either whey (20 g total protein) or soy (20 g total protein). Outcomes of interest include serum urea nitrogen and inflammation markers (CRP and IL-6). The findings will contribute to the knowledge gap regarding the effect of different protein types in CKD populations which can be translated to the development of affordable supplements to prevent malnutrition in adults with non-communicable diseases.
Kidney dysfunction is a complex and common event in patients with liver cirrhosis. Although novel treatments have shown some promising results , acute kidney injury remains a major complication of decompensated liver cirrhosis with high morbidity and mortality rates . AKI occurs in up to 19-20% of hospitalized patients with liver cirrhosis and among the most frequent causes are prerenal azotemia (PRA), hepatorenal syndrome and acute tubular necrosis , with prevalence rates estimated around 68%, 25%, and 33%, respectively. The introduction and widespread use of diagnostic criteria of AKI in the area of cirrhosis has contributed to an increased awareness and earlier detection of AKI. However, some important problems remain. One of the main issues is the differential diagnosis of AKI, particularly between acute tubular necrosis (ATN) and hepatorenal syndrome (HRS-AKI). This is important because treatment is different; renal replacement therapy (RRT) is used for the former, and vasoconstrictors and albumin are used for the latter.
Fatigue is found to be one of the most persistent problems among patients in treatment with hemodialysis, and associated with impaired health-related quality of life. A few, non-randomized controlled trials have found positive effects on fatigue by offering pre-recorded music intra-dialytic, however, without conclusive results. So far, no studies have investigated the feasibility of integrating person-tailored live music interventions performed by professional musicians into a hemodialysis setting. This leaves a deficit in knowledge for intervention planning, understanding and effectiveness of live music on fatigue, wellbeing and feelings of meaningfulness in this group of patients. Methods: A pilot randomized controlled trial combined with qualitative methods. The data collection will involve recruitment of 24 patients from an outpatient clinic over a six-week period. The patients will be randomized into either an intervention group or a control group. Patients in the intervention group will be offered a 30-minute session of patient-tailored live music intervention per week for six consecutive weeks. Patients in the control group will receive standard care. Quantitative analysis on immediate post-dialysis fatigue (VAS), and long-term fatigue (MFI-20), anxiety, depression (HADS) and treatment satisfaction (VAS) will show the potential effectiveness of intervention. Qualitative analysis of informal-interviews (patients/staff), observational data (patients) and focus group interviews (staff/musicians) will explore an in-depth understanding of whether music will improve wellbeing and create feelings of meaningfulness among this group of patients as well as to assess feasibility acceptability among patients, musicians and staff. Perspectives: This trial will ensure a firm methodological approach for the development of a future definitive randomized controlled trial of music intervention for fatigue reduction and wellbeing among hemodialysis patients.
The study is a multicentre, open label, phase I, two arms study to compare pharmacokinetic of firibastat after a single oral dose of firibastat 500 mg in fourteen healthy male volunteers and in fourteen End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) patients not yet in dialysis.
The study has been designed in order to investigate the performance and safety of the new Silencia PD cycler including the Silencia tubing system in comparison to the PD-Night and Homechoice PD cycler which are both well-established PD cyclers.