View clinical trials related to Renal Insufficiency, Chronic.
Filter by:CAPTIVATE is an international, multi-centre, Phase III, adaptive, platform, randomised controlled trial in people with chronic kidney disease (CKD). CAPTIVATE aims to find the best treatment, or combination of treatments, that slow the progression of CKD so that fewer people develop kidney failure. CAPTIVATE provides a research platform that allows many treatment-related questions to be answered within a common trial set-up.
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effects of intradialytic aerobic exercise on muscle capacity, functionality and motivation of patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing hemodialysis. The main question it aims to answer are: • Is intradialytic aerobic exercise at moderate intensity effective in improving peripheral muscle function, functional status and motivation in patients with chronic kidney disease?
The objective of this study is to widely implement and evaluate the Care Transitions App in a randomized controlled trial. The app the investigators designed for patients with multiple chronic conditions has four envisioned modules: 1) falls-reduction content, 2) a digital post-discharge transitional care plan (e.g., after hospital care plan, including education, medications, follow-up appointments, warning signs to watch for, nutrition, and other care plan activities), 3) a new module for patients with MCC (diabetes, congestive heart failure, and chronic kidney disease) including condition-specific post-discharge care plans with relevant symptom management activities, 4) a new post-discharge report module which summarizes key care transition findings and allows for patients to enter notes and questions for their providers and their own goals for recovery.
This is a multicenter, non-randomized, open-label, parallel-controlled study. The main objective is to evaluate the safety and pharmacokinetics of HRS-1780 in subjects with mild and moderate renal impairment versus healthy subjects, and to provide a basis for dose selection of HRS-1780 in patients with chronic kidney disease.
The prevalence of Chronic Kidney Disease is rising worldwide exponentially on account of a rising prevalence of the commonest causes of patients developing CKD. For instance, the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes, the commonest cause of CKD worldwide, is increasing with an expected 450 million people expected to have type 2 diabetes by 2030. Poorly controlled blood sugars are associated with a risk of complications related to the eyes, heart and kidneys amongst other organs, resulting in poor long-term health and quality of life. The kidney is one of the most frequently affected organs, with diabetes related kidney disease (DKD) the commonest cause of kidney failure worldwide, with patients requiring dialysis and transplantation to survive. However, despite transplantation allowing patients to live life's without the need for dialysis, diabetes remains to be associated with poor transplant function, cardiovascular disease and overall poor quality of life. With primary care being instrumental in the screening, diagnosis and management/monitoring of CKD, this study aims to identify areas done well as well as areas where improvement is needed to improve a patients clinical journey and management. This will be done in the form of an online questionnaire and focus groups, advertised via clinical commissioning groups across the United Kingdom. Through this, the investigators hope to gain further insight into areas of clinical management done well and areas of improvement as well as how primary care feel current management could be improved upon, obstacles faced, additional resources required and how they could be better supported by hospital specialists. Study results will be analysed and published in a peer reviewed journal with recommendations made with regards to how care should be altered to help delay and prevent CKD onset and progression.
The goal of this observational study is to detect the prevalence of NAFLD in CKD patients The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - [question 1] prevalence of NAFLD in CKD patients. - [question 2] the relationship between NAFLD and CKD.
To determine the acceptability and feasibility of a community health worker intervention that assists dialysis patients with low socioeconomic status navigate community resources to address health-related social needs. Findings will be used for a future randomized trial that determines the efficacy of the CHW intervention on mental health, quality of life, addressing social needs, and clinical outcomes. This study is intended to be generalizable in all dialysis centers.
Patients with Chronic kidney disease are most vulnerable to contrast induced nephropathy after Percutaneous coronary intervention, intravascular ultrasound guidance can be used to safely guide the procedure to reduce the contrast usage, this randomized trial is design to test the hypothesis that IVUS based ultra-low contrast PCI is feasible and can reduce the contrast induced nephropathy.
The aim of this study is to establish NLR, MLR as a good predictors for outcome of CKD including hemodialysis and CKD stage (4-5) patients as regard inflammation, malnutrition and anemia on cardiovascular complication.
Hemodiafiltration is a renal replacement technique combining diffusion and convection to enhance solute removal. Post dialyser replacement fluid is administered to achieve the target fluid balance. The skin is the largest human organ playing an important role in thermal and Na regulation and skin blood flow is 8.5-10%of cardiac output .