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Traumatic Shock clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06270615 Recruiting - Wounds and Injuries Clinical Trials

Prospective Validation of the SHOCKMATRIX Hemorrhage Predictive Model

SHOCKMATRIX
Start date: July 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Management of post-traumatic severe hemorrhage remains a challenge to any trauma care system. Studying integrated and innovative tools designed to predict the risk of early severe hemorrhage (ESH) and resource needs could offer a promising option to improve clinical decisions and then shorten the time of intervention in the context of pre-hospital severe trauma. As evidence seems to be lacking to address this issue, this ambispective validation study proposes to assess on an independent cohort the predictive performance of a newly developed machine learning-based model, as well as the feasibility of its clinical deployment under real-time healthcare conditions.

NCT ID: NCT04497155 Completed - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

Prehospital Norepinephrine and Early Mortality in Traumatic Shock

Start date: January 1, 2013
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The effect of early, prehospital norepinephrine use in patients with traumatic shock on mortality is unknown. Recent existing observational evidence from single system data (US, France, Japan) are conflicting. The investigators hypothesize that prehospital norepinephrine is associated with decreased mortality when used in patients with traumatic shock.

NCT ID: NCT01611935 Completed - Traumatic Shock Clinical Trials

AVERT Shock: Arginine Vasopressin During the Early Resuscitation of Traumatic Shock

AVERTShock
Start date: May 1, 2013
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Trauma patients, who are transfused with multiple blood products to treat shock due to blood loss, frequently develop inappropriately low vasopressin levels. Vasopressin is a hormone necessary to maintain an adequate blood pressure and low levels have been associated with the need for increased transfusions, vasopressors and additional morbidity. Vasopressin is routinely used in the ICU to treat septic shock and other disease processes resulting in decreased vasopressin levels and low blood pressure. This study will investigate the potential benefit of early vasopressin supplementation during the resuscitation of trauma patients and the applicability of using copeptin as a vasopressin biomarker. Trauma patients who receive 6 or more units of blood product within 12 hours of arrival will be randomized to receive a vasopressin bolus plus infusion or a similar volume of a placebo (normal saline) for 48 hours. Serial blood samples will be taken for 5 days post-injury. Clinical and demographic data will be recorded prospectively.