View clinical trials related to Sepsis, Severe.
Filter by:Sepsis is a condition with a high mortality. Septic patients are frequently difficult to identify because of their non-specific presentations. There is also a low sensitivity of clinical judgment among health care personnel, and of existing screening tools, which are in turn typically based on vital parameters. Despite prior research, no unique sepsis biomarker has been identified so far. There is a need for new strategies to identify sepsis which do not rely on vital parameters and traditional laboratory blood tests alone. The hypothesis of the investigators is that a combination of clinical variables measurable in the ambulance can be used to predict sepsis. The aim of the current study is to determine the predictive value of keywords related to symptom presentation, vital parameters and point-of-care (POC) blood tests, alone and in combination, with respect to the outcome sepsis. The study is performed in the Stockholm ambulance setting from April 2017. A total of 956 adult non-trauma patients will be included.
A study of renal blood flow and renal oxygenation measured by magnetic resonance after a standardized fluid challenge in critically ill, resuscitated, patients with sepsis due to COVID-19 or other agents.