View clinical trials related to Vascular System Injuries.
Filter by:This cross-over study of twenty five (anticipated) healthy human subjects will utilize two active control devices, and two different widths of the investigational device. One active control is representative of the usual care tourniquet applied in hospital settings. The second active control is a windlass tourniquet representative of the pre-hospital and military usual care tourniquet device. Two inch and four inch widths of the investigational device will be evaluated. The purpose of this study is to characterize and compare investigational and control tourniquet safety and efficacy. All tourniquets will be applied to the upper thigh. Efficacy data is provided by the presence or absence of popliteal flow when assessed with ultrasound. Mapping of interface pressures between the skin and the tourniquet will provide safety data. A minimum washout of five minutes will be allowed between tourniquet applications. All interventions will be applied in one visit. No follow up visit is anticipated.
The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of melatonin in the regulation of the vascular injury in smokers through population-based, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
This project aimed to explore novel methods of detecting small blood vessel disease in a paediatric population with type 1 diabetes mellitus. To do this the techniques of Nailfold capillaroscopy, laser Doppler flowmetry, retinal (eye) vessel analysis and 24-hr Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring were used. Each of these techniques investigated different areas of small blood vessels around the body. It was hypothesized that in a paediatric population with type 1 diabetes mellitus the novel investigations would be associated with small blood vessel disease and that widespread changes to these blood vessels would be detected through associations between the different novel investigations.
Data will be collected on the type of tourniquet and circumstances of its use. Patients with penetrating extremity injury will have clinical and pre-clinical hospital data collected.