Treatment Trials

5 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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COMPLETED
Normal Saline Versus Plasmalyte in Initial Resuscitation of Trauma Patients
Description

The purpose of this study is to determine whether an intravenous salt solution called "Plasmalyte" causes less abnormality of the body's acid levels than a solution called "Normal Saline."

COMPLETED
Saline Against Lactated Ringers or Plasmalyte in the Emergency Department
Description

This study will be a cluster-randomized, single-center trial comparing 0.9% saline (normal saline) vs physiologically-balanced crystalloid fluids (Lactated Ringers or Plasmalyte A) for intravenous fluid administration in the emergency department.

COMPLETED
Effects of IV Chloride Content on Outcomes
Description

This observational study evaluates the impact of high and low chloride containing IV fluids on administrative and clinical outcomes. The study uses a large electronic health dataset and examines patients receiving fluid replacement and resuscitation. The hypothesis is that high chloride solutions are associated with adverse outcomes as measured by administrative data and by clinical parameters.

RECRUITING
Pragmatic Pediatric Trial of Balanced Versus Normal Saline Fluid in Sepsis
Description

The objectives of this multicenter pragmatic clinical trial are to compare the effectiveness and relative safety of balanced fluid resuscitation versus 0.9% "normal" saline in children with septic shock, including whether balanced fluid resuscitation can reduce progression of kidney injury.

Conditions
COMPLETED
Isotonic Solution Administration Logistical Testing
Description

The administration of intravenous crystalloids is ubiquitous in the care of the critically ill. Commonly available crystalloid solutions contain a broad spectrum of electrolyte compositions including a range of chloride concentrations. Recent studies of associated higher fluid chloride content with acute kidney injury and mortality but no large, randomized trials have been conducted. In preparation for a large, cluster-randomized, multiple-crossover trial comparing 0.9% sodium chloride to physiologically-balanced isotonic crystalloids (Lactated Ringers or Plasmalyte-A) in intensive care unit patients, this pilot study will enroll all patients admitted to the medical intensive care unit at a single tertiary center for a sixth month period. The primary objective will be to test the ability of an electronic order entry tool to ensure administration of assigned study fluid or record contraindications to assigned study fluid. The pilot study will also demonstrate the feasibility of collecting demographic, severity of illness, fluid management, vital sign, laboratory, acute kidney injury and renal replacement therapy, and outcome data in an automated, electronic fashion.