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Vascular System Injuries clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Vascular System Injuries.

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NCT ID: NCT04937868 Recruiting - Aortic Dissection Clinical Trials

Developing a Decision Instrument to Guide Abdominal-pelvic CT Imaging of Blunt Trauma Patients

NEXUS AP CT
Start date: January 15, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Unrecognized abdominal and pelvic injuries can result in catastrophic disability and death. Sporadic reports of "occult" injuries have generated concern, and physicians, fearing that they may miss such an injury, have adopted the practice of obtaining computed tomography on virtually all patients with significant blunt trauma. This practice exposes large numbers patients to dangerous radiation at considerable expense, while detecting injuries in a small minority of cases. Existing data suggest that a limited number of criteria can reliably identify blunt injury victims who have "no risk" of abdominal or pelvic injuries, and hence no need for computed tomography (CT), without misidentifying any injured patient. It is estimated that nationwide implementation of such criteria could result in an annual reduction in radiographic charges of $75 million, and a significant decrease in radiation exposure and radiation induced malignancies. This study seeks to determine whether "low risk" criteria can reliably identify patients who have sustained significant abdominal or pelvic injuries and safely decrease CT imaging of blunt trauma patients. This goal will be accomplished in the following manner: All blunt trauma victims undergoing computed tomography of the abdomen/pelvis in the emergency department will undergo routine clinical evaluations prior to radiographic imaging. Based on these examinations, the presence or absence of specific clinical findings (i.e. abdominal/pelvic/flank pain, abdominal/pelvic/flank tenderness, bruising abrasions, distention, hip pain, hematuria, hypotension, tachycardia, low or falling hematocrit, intoxication, altered sensorium, distracting injury, positive FAST imaging, dangerous mechanism, abnormal x-ray imaging) will be recorded for each patient, as will the presence or absence of abdominal or pelvic injuries. The clinical findings will serve as potential imaging criteria. At the completion of the derivation portion of the study the criteria will be examined to find a subset that predicts injury with high sensitivity, while simultaneously excluding injury, and hence the need for imaging, in the remaining patients. These criteria will then be confirmed in a separate validation phase of the study. The criteria will be considered to be reliable if the lower statistical confidence limit for the measured sensitivity exceeds 98.0%. Potential reductions in CT imaging will be estimated by determining the proportion of "low-risk" patients that do not have significant abdominal or pelvic injuries.

NCT ID: NCT04588649 Completed - Clinical trials for Post-stroke Dementia

The Aging Brain and Cognition: Contribution of Vascular Injury, Amyloid Plaque and Tau Protein to Cognitive Dysfunction After Stroke

Start date: January 4, 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Stroke can lead to signficiant neurological deficits, and about one-third of stroke patients will be diagnosed of vascular mild cognitive impairment or post-stroke dementia. Post-stroke dementia includes all types of dementia that happen after stroke, irrespective of their cause, and vascular dementia (VaD), degenerative dementia (especially Alzheimer's disease), or mixed dementia (dementia as a result of the coexistence of vascular lesions of the brain and neurodegenerative lesions) are the most common causes of post-stroke dementia. However, it is difficult to determine to what extent cognitive impairment may be attributable to stroke versus concomitant Alzheimer disease. With the advent of PET imaging technique, we are able to conduct a multi-modal neuroimaging study to explore the composite influence of vascular injury, amyloid plaque and Tau protein the the cognitive performance after stroke.

NCT ID: NCT04457219 Terminated - Clinical trials for Injury; Blood Vessel, Wrist, Radial Artery

Assessment of Radial Artery Complications Whilst Achieving Rapid Haemostasis

ARCH
Start date: June 18, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare different protocols aimed at achieving haemostasis (i.e. stop the bleeding) in patients undergoing heart procedures with access through the wrist. Specifically, a haemostatic dressing that aids clotting at the level of the skin will be used and compared with a normal absorbent dressing. Also, a shorter time of compression required to stop the bleeding at the access site will be evaluated.

NCT ID: NCT04242602 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Traumatic Brain Injury

Multimodal Monitoring of Cerebral Autoregulation After Pediatric Brain Injury

Start date: November 6, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Various methods have been studied to evaluate autoregulation. However, there is currently no universally accepted technique to assess integrity of the cerebral autoregulation neurovascular system. In the last decade, significant progress has been achieved in developing methods to assess cerebral autoregulation by quantifying cross-correlation between spontaneous oscillations in CBF or oxygenation and similar oscillations in arterial blood pressure. In this study the investigators will analyze the relationship between spontaneous fluctuations in mean arterial blood pressure and cerebral blood flow velocity or cerebral regional oxygenation to investigate two novel methods for measuring cerebral autoregulation, Transfer Function Analysis and Wavelet Coherence after acute pediatric brain injury.

NCT ID: NCT03975985 Terminated - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

The Effectiveness of Core Stability Exercises

CORE
Start date: January 15, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study assess the effectiveness of core stability exercises performed in subacute phase of stroke. Half of participants will receive conventional physiotherapy, while the other half will receive core stability exercises and core stability exercises plus transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS).

NCT ID: NCT03676309 Completed - Clinical trials for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Efficacy and Safety of Nutraceuticals in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus Type II and Dyslipidemia.

Start date: September 1, 2017
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The presence of dyslipidemia, is a significant cardiovascular risk factor. This factor, however, determines the three-fold increase in cardiometabolic risk when an isolated or mixed dyslipidemia is associated with the presence of diabetes mellitus. Diabetes mellitus is a metabolic alteration resulting in a decrease in insulin secondary to reduced availability of this hormone or an impediment to its normal action or a combination of these factors. . Under normal conditions, the vascular endothelium responds to short-term increases in flow by releasing NO and other endothelium-dependent relaxing factors that dilate the artery. Flow-mediated dilation(FMD) is impaired in atherosclerotic coronary arteries. The supplementation with polyphenols of olive leaves, bergamot extract, gymnema sylvatic extract (gymnemic acid) and phaseolamin (bean protein) significantly improves the glico-lipid balance through an improvement in liver function, an inhibition to more levels of lipid metabolism . Recently, it has been documented how the polyphenolic fraction extracted from bergamot (BPF) administered orally both in animal models with induced hyperlipidemia diet, and in patients with metabolic syndrome, produces a significant and substantial reduction of serum cholesterol, triglycerides and blood levels of glucose. This effect was accompanied by an important improvement in vascular reactivity in patients with hyperlipidemia and high blood sugar, suggesting the potential protective role of BPF in patients with metabolic syndrome and elevated cardiovascular risk. Oleuropeina (Olea Europaea) is also characterized by a peculiar polyphenolic profile. Both fruits and leaves, thanks to their cardioprotective activity, are used as antihypertensive agents and in the treatment of vascular disorders. The gymnemic acid (glycosidic triterpene), extracted from the leaves of Gymnema Sylvestre, is the representative element of the plant. Thanks to its presence in the phytocomplex, it carries out a hypoglycaemic action through two main mechanisms: inhibition of intestinal sugar absorption and increased metabolic transformation of glucose at the cellular level. To better define the interrelations of systemic CRFs, FMD, and effects of chronic nutraceutical supplements we performed clinical evaluations and ultrasound measurements of the flow and diameter responses to forearm cuff occlusion in a large, well characterized community-based cohort.

NCT ID: NCT03631056 Available - Vascular Diseases Clinical Trials

Individual Patient Expanded Access for Human Acellular Vessel (HAV)

Start date: n/a
Phase:
Study type: Expanded Access

Individual patient expanded access requests may be considered for patients who have no other treatment options and are not eligible for an HAV clinical study

NCT ID: NCT03598140 Terminated - Concussion, Brain Clinical Trials

Sildenafil Treatment for Mild TBI

Start date: July 25, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

About 300,000 people are hospitalized for traumatic brain injury (TBI) each year. After TBI, secondary brain injury escalates due in part to heightened levels of oxidant injury, inflammation, and vascular injury. Traumatic cerebral vascular injury (TCVI) may begin almost immediately after the primary injury and evolve into chronic neurodegenerative conditions. TCVI is a very complex TBI endophenotype and microvascular injuries have been described in a plethora of animal and human TBI studies. These injuries consist of endothelial injury, disruption of the blood brain barrier (BBB), a reduction of capillary density, intravascular microthrombi, and white-matter degeneration. Recently, use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-Blood Oxygen Level Dependent (BOLD) combined with hypercapnia (high spatial and temporal resolution) by our research group has proven to be more sensitive at measuring alterations of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in TBI subjects. The goal of the proposed research is to test the efficacy of Viagra® (sildenafil) at normalizing CBF and improving cognitive outcomes in people that have experienced a TBI. Sildenafil is a phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE-5) inhibitor that has previously been administered as a therapy for high blood pressure and erectile dysfunction. In people that have been affected by stroke-induce neurotrauma, sildenafil improved CBF and was found to be neuroprotective. With respect to chronic TBI, previous studies have demonstrated that sildenafil therapy potentiates cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) in areas of the brain with damaged endothelium. In this proposal, the investigators will test the hypothesis that sildenafil treatment in boxers/Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) fighters soon after concussion normalizes CBF, potentiates CVR, reduces post-concussion symptoms, and improves cognition.

NCT ID: NCT03236415 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Coronary Artery Disease

Comparative Response to Vascular Injury in Patients With Diabetes Mellitus: An OCT Study of BVS Versus Xience DES

Start date: August 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Stents are used at centers around the world to unblock the arteries of the heart. These stents are usually made of metal and remain permanently within the blood vessel wall. Newer developments in the stent technology has led to stent scaffolds that can be reabsorbed over time. Patients with diabetes are prone to more complex blockages in the heart arteries which can be more difficult to treat. The purpose of this study is to compare the difference of how arteries heal early when metal stents or resorbable stents are used in patients with diabetes.

NCT ID: NCT03005418 Active, not recruiting - Trauma Clinical Trials

Humacyte Human Acellular Vessel (HAV) in Patients With Vascular Trauma

Start date: September 1, 2018
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the use of the Human Acellular Vessel (HAV) in adults with vascular trauma below the neck who are undergoing vascular reconstructive surgery. There will be a torso cohort and a limb cohort. All subjects will be implanted with a HAV as an interposition vessel or bypass using standard vascular surgical techniques. There is no control arm.