View clinical trials related to Sepsis.
Filter by:A randomized controlled clinical trial. 24 adult ICU patients will be recruited upon decision to administer fluid bolus of 500ml of crystalloid. The fluid will then be randomized to be infused at controlled room temperature or warmed to body temperature. Hemodynamic measurements will be made for 2 hours following the bolus, and laboratory values will be noted. The hypothesis is that part of the hemodynamic response will differed in response to cooling, and be larger in the cold group.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether ceftolozane-tazobactam is as effective as meropenem with respect to 30 day mortality in the treatment of bloodstream infection due to third-generation cephalosporin non-susceptible Enterobacterales or a known chromosomal AmpC-producing Enterobacterales (Enterobacter spp., Citrobacter freundii, Morganella morganii, Providencia spp. or Serratia marcescens).
Rescu Epistry includes data points pertaining to prehospital and in-hospital clinical treatments and responses to therapy, survival to discharge and functional outcome data for all cases.
This feasibility study serves to determine if it is possible to perform a powered randomized control trial of high-dose intravenous vitamin C (ascorbic acid) as an adjunctive medication in the management of sepsis and septic shock in Rwanda. Further data will be collected including Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score, Universal Vital Assessment (UVA) score, duration of vasopressors, mortality and other key indicators to possibly determine the impact of vitamin C on organ failure and clinical course. A total of 24 patients with a diagnosis of sepsis or septic shock will be recruited after obtaining informed consent at the University Teaching Hospital of Kigali (CHUK) and will be randomized in a 1:1 fashion to receive drug or placebo. Both treatment arms will receive standard treatment (intravenous fluids, antibiotics, vasopressors as needed, etc.) in addition to study drug or placebo. During the course of the study, any difficulties encountered will be recorded and will inform process improvements for a full randomized control, if it is indeed considered possible to perform the definitive trial.
Platelets are important mediators of an inflammatory response and a key component of the innate immune system to defend the human body against invading pathogens. However, little evidence exists regarding the number of platelets that should be used als transfusion threshold in septic patients. In this trial platelet transfusion will be performed with either <50000/µl or <20000/µl as a trigger.
The focus of this study will be to conduct a prospective, multi-center randomized controlled trial (RCT) at Cape Regional Medical Center (CRMC), Oroville Hospital (OH), and UCSF Medical Center (UCSF) in which a machine-learning algorithm will be applied to EHR data for the detection of sepsis. For patients determined to have a high risk of sepsis, the algorithm will generate automated voice, telephone notification to nursing staff at CRMC, OH, and UCSF. The algorithm's performance will be measured by analysis of the primary endpoint, in-hospital SIRS-based mortality.
Randomized, controlled, double blind clinical trial. Adult patients admitted to the ICU of the Hospital Español de México with a diagnosis of septic shock will be included. Patients will be randomized to one of the study groups: Intervention Group: Vitamin C 6 grams in 250 ml of 0.9% saline solution every 24 hours, in continuous infusion for 72 hours. Placebo Group: 0.9% saline solution 250 ml every 24 hours, in continuous infusion for 72 hours.
The CAPSS Study is a retrospective and prospective, multi-center, single-arm post-market data collection study with an FDA cleared device. Physiologic data measurements will be collected from enrolled subjects using electronic health records and data streams via the Accuryn Monitoring System. Analysis of these data has the potential to be able to acutely guide resuscitation and monitor trends for emerging critical conditions.
The focus of this study will be to conduct a prospective, randomized controlled trial (RCT) at Cape Regional Medical Center (CRMC), Oroville Hospital (OH), and UCSF Medical Center (UCSF) in which a Gram type infection-specific algorithm will be applied to EHR data for the detection of severe sepsis. For patients determined to have a high risk of severe sepsis, the algorithm will generate automated voice, telephone notification to nursing staff at CRMC, OH, and UCSF. The algorithm's performance will be measured by analysis of the primary endpoint, time to antibiotic administration. The secondary endpoint will be reduction in the administration of unnecessary antibiotics, which includes reductions in secondary antibiotics and reductions in total time on antibiotics.
The LifeFlow rapid infusion device is a handheld manually-operated device that has been shown in early trials to increase the rate of bolus fluid infusion up to 3 times the rate of delivery attributed to conventional rapid infusion devices. The device addresses other technical barriers to fluid resuscitation, including reducing complexity and provider fatigue. LifeFlow utilizes standard IV or intraosseous (IO) vascular access devices to quickly and efficiently deliver appropriate volumes of crystalloid fluid to patients during emergent fluid resuscitation. The purpose of this study is to determine if intravenous fluids can be administered more rapidly and efficiently with the use of the LifeFlow rapid infusion device compared to the current standard techniques in adult patients who present to the Emergency Department with septic shock.