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Showing 1-8 of 8 trials
NCT07238582
This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of an innovative, non-invasive chest stabilizer in patients with multiple rib fractures caused by blunt chest trauma. Rib fractures often lead to severe pain, breathing difficulties, and complications such as pneumonia or atelectasis. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: standard pain management or the new chest stabilizer, which will be used for 10 days. The study will assess improvements in pain levels, breathing function (including FVC, FEV1, and PEF), and the occurrence of lung-related complications. Additional outcomes such as hospital stay, patient comfort, and skin reactions related to the device will also be evaluated. The goal of this research is to determine whether the innovative stabilizer can provide safer, more comfortable, and more effective treatment compared with current standard care for rib fracture patients.
NCT06744959
This prospective observational study aims to evaluate the predictive utility of the Thorax Trauma Severity Score (TTSS) in determining morbidity and mortality in patients presenting with chest trauma at a tertiary hospital in Iraq. The primary objectives of the study are: To assess the accuracy of TTSS in predicting mortality and critical outcomes such as ICU admission and the need for advanced interventions. To evaluate the utility of TTSS in stratifying patients based on injury severity in a resource-constrained setting. To identify demographic and clinical factors influencing the predictive performance of TTSS. Participants will: Be assessed using the TTSS upon arrival at the emergency department to establish risk stratification. Provide demographic and clinical data, including age, gender, mechanism of injury, comorbidities, and length of hospital stay, for analyzing associations with clinical outcomes.
NCT07037797
Background: FAST ultrasound is a crucial technique in emergency medicine, enabling rapid assessment of trauma patients. By allowing visualization of an effusion in a trauma patient in a far more sensitive and specific way than clinical examination, it enables informed decisions to be made on therapeutics, technical gestures, but also the potential receiving service. Arbitrarily, FAST ultrasound is taught with the cardiac probe (phased-array) and the abdominal probe (curvilinear). The difference in use of these two probes varies according to operator and team, with no figures available. No recent study has been conducted on the possibility of better diagnostic performance of FAST with a curvilinear versus phased-array probe. Objective: The main objective of this project is to evaluate and compare the diagnostic performance of FAST ultrasound using a phased-array probe versus a curvilinear probe in the detection of effusions in trauma patients (FAST protocol). Materials and methods: Prospective, interventional, multicenter, randomized study. Hypothesis tested: FAST-ultrasound with a curvilinear probe improves diagnostic performance compared with FAST-ultrasound with a phased-array probe.
NCT06264856
The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of bronchoscopic sputum suction in patients with severe thoracic illness-induced respiratory failure. The study will compare the outcomes of patients who receive bronchoscopic sputum suction versus blind negative pressure aspiration for sputum removal. The study will measure baseline data, postoperative blood gas conditions, and clinical parameters, such as time of invasive ventilation, total time of ventilation, hospital stay, weaning success rate, reintubation rate, ventilator-associated pneumonia incidence, and fatality rate. The study aims to determine whether bronchoscopy-assisted sputum removal is superior to blind negative pressure aspiration in improving patient outcomes.
NCT05692076
to compare the respiratory complications in patient managed with high velocity nasal insufflation versus patients managed with conventional low flow oxygen in patients with severe chest trauma
NCT04318496
Introduction: Chest blunt trauma accounts in up to 65% of polytrauma patients. In patients with 0-2 rib fracture, the treatment is relatively limited to oral pain killer and breathing exercise. The patients will suffer two weeks of severe pain accompanied with poor sleep and inability to preform simple daily live activities. In this double blind randomized control study, the investigators offer acupuncture as an additional treatment option. Methods: The study is a double blind randomized control trial. the study will include the press needle acupuncture (Acu) and placebo (Con) group. Both groups will receive one treatment, following the first visit to the clinic after chest trauma accident.
NCT04518904
Pulmonary contusion caused by severe thoracic trauma is a complex disease. Some patients may be secondary to severe complications such as pulmonary infection or even acute respiratory distress syndrome. At present, there have been no reports on related studies based on Chinese population. In this study, 800 patients with pulmonary contusion will be retrospectively investigated to determine the risk factors and independent risk factors of their poor prognosis, and to construct a prognosis prediction model and scoring criteria.
NCT01623921
Background: Lung contusion affects 17%-25% of adult blunt trauma patients, and is the leading cause of death from blunt thoracic injury. Statins are lipid-lowering drugs with recently suggested anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. Cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX-2) is a key enzyme in the production of prostaglandins (PG), and evidence suggests that COX-2 plays an important role in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury (ALI). Aims: The current study aims at evaluating the beneficial effects of statins and COX-2 receptor inhibitors on ALI elicited by blunt trauma to the chest. Methods: After approval by the institutional ethics and a scientific committee, and obtaining informed consent , patients admitted to the emergency department (ED) due to blunt trauma with a diagnosis of lung contusion will be enrolled in the study.The effects of statins and COX 2 inhibitors on ALI will be assessed by recording clinical parameters and measuring inflammatory mediators levels in the serum and in the bronchoalveolar space. Expected results: The investigators expect to find that the proposed treatment will be effective in reducing ALI burden. The investigators also suppose that using a combination of those drugs will synergistically potentiate their effect on ALI.