View clinical trials related to Safety Issues.
Filter by:The aim of this study is evaluating safety profile of COVID-19 Vaccine in healthy adults aged >18 years in Indonesia.
This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded single and multiple ascending dose (SAD and MAD) study of the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics of EQU-001 in healthy volunteers.
The WHO Surgical Safety Checklist is a simple tool designed to improve the safety of surgical procedures by bringing together the whole operating team (surgeons, anaesthesia providers and nurses) to perform key safety checks during vital phases of perioperative care: prior to the induction of anesthesia, prior to skin incision and before the team leaves the operating room. In 2007, WHO Patient Safety launched the Second Global Patient Safety Challenge, Safe Surgery Saves Lives.Anaesthetists, operating theatre nurses, surgeons, safety experts, patients and other professionals came together and came up with the WHO Surgical Safety Checklist. The 19 items of the surgical checklist have shown to improve on mortality and morbidity. Surgical time out is carried out before the start of any surgical procedures to reduce the occurrence of wrong-site, wrong-procedure, and wrong-person surgery where the patient's identity, the procedure, and the surgical site before surgical incision or the start of the procedure is verified. This also helps to raise any concern regarding the procedural risk and any concerns, prevent medical errors, patient morbidity, patient mortality, and reduce surgical complication rates. The Checklist is intended as a tool for use by clinicians interested in improving the safety of their operations and reducing unnecessary surgical deaths and complications and also help ensure that teams consistently follow a few critical safety steps and thereby minimize the most common and avoidable risks endangering the lives and wellbeing of surgical patients . The aim of this Checklist is to reinforce accepted safety practices and foster better communication and teamwork between clinical disciplines.
Non critical hospitalized patients were bathed daily with 4 substances: bleach at .005%, bleach at .0125%, clorhexidine 2% and soap and water. 76 patients were enrolled and divided 19 subjects per group. Each patient was cultured with swab technique in palm, antecubital fold and armpit at day 0, day 3 and day 7 of enrollment. Bacterial cultures were incubated and compared if decolonization occurred. Adverse events were evaluated in all patients. Only 1 patient had and adverse event and was dry skin. Before patient was enrolled, he had dry skin because of his baseline disease. Moisturizing lotion was applied and patient continue in the study.
The presence of multimorbidities is very common among the elderly, which become major consumers of medicines. The process of prescribing medicines for the elderly should be done with caution, as the use of some medications may present more risks than benefits in this range age. Potentially inappropriate prescribing for the elderly has become a global concern for the promotion of an adequate pharmacotherapy, it becomes essential to be aware of the effectiveness and safety of medicines and the knowledge of which drugs whose risks of serious adverse reactions outweigh the benefit of your referral. In this sense, the present study has aim to evaluate the effectiveness of pharmaceutical interventions in frequency of omission of drugs with proven efficacy for cardiovascular diseases and promotion of treatment prescription inappropriate and polypharmacy. A prospective quasi experimental before and after study will be carried out in elderly patients diagnosed with cardiovascular disease admitted to the Ana Nery hospital, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. A convenience sample will be collected, the data will be released and revised in a database built in the SPSS software and analyzed in the program statistic R and SPSS. At the end of the study, it is expected a decrease in the frequency of omission of medications and promotion of prescription drugs inappropriate.
Glucocorticoids are the cornerstone treatment for polymyalgia rheumatica but induce adverse events. The efficacy of the candidate drug Tofacitinib has not yet been demonstrated in controlled studies. The aim of the study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of Tofacitinib as a glucocorticoid sparing agent in patients with polymyalgia rheumatica.
A follow-up assessment study of the long-term safety of vestibular electrical stimulation as delivered by the Vestal DM Device.
This trial is part of the Horizon 2020 project, REPO-TRIAL, on in-silico, mechanism-based drug repurposing in high unmet-medical-need indications. This project aims to identify causal, rather than symptomatic disease mechanisms for highly precise and effective interventions. Here a signalling module comprised of reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and cyclic GMP signalling has been identified to be involved in post-stroke blood-brain-barrier disruption and neuronal death. It can be targeted by repurposing three drugs, which inhibit overshooting nitric oxide (NO) and ROS formation, respectively, and stimulate compromised neuroprotective cyclic GMP formation. It is possible that two of the drugs (riociguat, perphenazine) may cause a drop and one drug an elevation of blood pressure (propylthiouracil) leading to an overall drop in blood pressure. On top of that, the three drugs may synergise on blood pressure in a previously not recognised manner. These potential safety concerns, expressed in a scientific advice meeting by the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfArM), shall be tested in the present phase I safety trial. The trial consists of a screening visit (SCR), a treatment period, and an EOT visit. In the treatment period, after a baseline evaluation, single doses of all three substances will be administered concurrently. Provocation manoeuvres (tilt table) will be performed with the goal of generating maximum safety information on drug-induced blood pressure changes. Concurrently, a 24-h electrocardiogram (ECG) will be recorded (Holter ECG) and blood samples will be drawn for exploratory biomarker analyses, quantification of riociguat, and optional pharmacokinetic analyses of perphenazine and propylthiouracil.
Patients with chronic rheumatic diseases (such as systemic lupus erythematosus [SLE], rheumatoid arthritis [RA], ankylosing spondylitis [AS], juvenile idiopathic arthritis [JIA], poly/dermatomyositis [PM/DM], systemic sclerosis [SSc], systemic vasculitis, and primary Sjögren's syndrome [pSS]) are particularly susceptible to infectious diseases due to autoimmune disorder itself and its treatment (immunosuppressive therapies). Similarly, people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) are predisposed to infections by different agents. The current 2019 Coronavirus Disease Pandemic-19 (COVID-19), caused by the SARS-CoV-2 (severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) began in December 2019 in Wuhan, China, and quickly became a global health and economic emergency by taking to an unprecedented burden on health systems around the world. However, SARS-Cov-2 infection raised particular concern in patients with autoimmune rheumatic diseases (DRAI) since, due to chronic inflammatory immune dysregulation and the regular use of immunosuppressive drugs, these patients are considered to be at high risk of contracting SARS-CoV-2 and potentially evolving to a worse prognosis. The overlap between the COVID-19 pandemic and the HIV/AIDS pandemic also poses an additional challenge, as the impact of co-infection is not yet fully known. The response to vaccines for other agents, however, has already been described as compromised in PLWHA. Vaccination is the most effective preventive measure to control the spread of coronavirus and to reduce associated complications. Usually, live or attenuated vaccines are not recommended for patients with chronic rheumatic diseases using immunosuppressants. However, immunization with inactivated agents is strongly indicated, resulting, in general, in good immunogenicity and adequate vaccine safety, as well as without relevant deleterious effects on diseases. Vaccine efficacy studies are needed to verify the immunogenicity of the vaccine against COVID-19 in immunosuppressed patients with rheumatological disease and those with HIV-related disease considering the risk of greater severity. In addition, it is important to assess the safety of the vaccine in this population as well as the possibility of reactivating the rheumatological disease itself. The present study will evaluate the safety and immunogenicity of the CoronaVac (Coronavirus vaccine, Sinovac Biotech Ltd.) in patients with rheumatic diseases and PLWHA
A prospective, randomized, active-controlled clinical trial was conducted to evaluate safety of sericin-chitosan cream in healthy volunteers.