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Tundra lists 12 Fluid Therapy clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07260890
Paired Comparison of SVV and PVI Accuracy
This study will compare two operating-room monitors-stroke volume variation (SVV, from the arterial line) and the Pleth Variability Index (PVI, from the pulse oximeter)-to see which one more accurately predicts whether giving a small fluid bolus will improve the heart's pumping during laparoscopic major abdominal surgery. Adults having elective surgery under general anesthesia will receive two small, timed 250-mL crystalloid infusions as part of routine care (one before and one after creation of the pneumoperitoneum). The research team will record SVV and PVI values just before and three minutes after each infusion while keeping these readings hidden from the clinicians so that usual care is not changed. No experimental drugs or devices are used. The main goal is to learn which index better identifies "fluid responsiveness," so future care can be safer and more consistent. Potential risks are minimal and relate to the small fluid boluses (temporary changes in blood pressure or heart rate); the test stops if the anesthesiologist has any safety concerns. There is no direct benefit to participants, but results may help guide fluid therapy for similar patients in the future. The study is being conducted at a single academic hospital in the Republic of Korea and plans to enroll about 300 adults.
Gender: All
Ages: 19 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-12-29
1 state
NCT06351475
Efficacy of Intraoperative Use of 20% Albumin Combined With Ringer Lactate Versus Ringer Lactate During Cytoreductive Surgery With Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy
Introduction Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) with hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) is considered as the standard of care for the treatment of peritoneal metastases. Cytoreductive surgery with HIPEC is characterized by large intra operative fluid shift secondary to surgical resection, peritoneal inflammation and capillary shifts, requesting high volume of intra operative fluid therapy. Previous studies found a strong association between intra operative hypovolemia or volume overload with post operative outcomes. Albumin as an intravenous fluid has been widely studied in critical ill patients, but evaluation of its efficacy during major surgery on post operative clinical outcomes are lacking. We hypothesize that a reduction of intra operative crystalloid volume infusion by using 20% albumin during CRS with HIPEC could improve patients' prognosis. The aim of this study will be to assess the efficacy of 20% albumin combined with Ringer Lactate versus Ringer Lactate for fluid therapy during CRS with HIPEC on post operative outcome at 28 day. Methods and analysis The study protocol has been designed and written in accordance with the Prospective randomised, comparative, controlled, prospective, open-label, with parallel group and multicentre clinical trial. Recruitment, randomisation and allocation Information on the study and screening of patients will be conducted during the consultation of anaesthesia (= selection visit), 2 months at 3 days before the surgery. Information notice and consent form will be delivered. The day before the surgery, anaesthesiologist who will conduct the pre anaesthetic visit will be able to include patients in the study (=inclusion visit). Randomisation will be done at the inclusion visit after information and signature of consent form of voluntary patients. A randomization number will be assigned. The 1:1 randomisation will be centralized via an online interface ensuring secret group assignment, and based on predefined randomisation lists with variable-size permutation blocks, stratified by center. Randomisation will be accomplished using a computer-generated random sequence. Randomized Open, Blinded endpoint (PROBE) design. This study is a randomised, comparative, controlled, prospective, open-label, with parallel group and multicentre clinical trial. Intervention * 20% Albumin + Ringer Lactate group (intervention group) Per-operative fluid therapy consisting in Ringer Lactate combined with 20% albumin. Patients will receive a bolus of 3 mL/kg on one hour of 20% albumin from anaesthetic induction. Then, infusion of 20% albumin (100 mL, 20g) will be administered for each 1200 mL of vascular filling by Ringer Lactate. Dosage of intra operative albuminemia will be realized 2 hours after the end of the bolus or infusion to ensure albuminemia is within the target concentrations (35-45 g/L). Use of 20% albumin will be realized for the entire duration of the surgery and stopped at the end of the surgery. * Control group Ringer Lactate for intra operative fluid management based on the latest scientific recommendations. As the the study is an open labelled randomized clinical trial, placebo use is not planned. Outcome measures The primary outcome will be the Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI score) at day 28 after CRS with HIPEC. Secondary outcomes are mortality at day 28, CCI score at day 7, volume of intra operative and post operative (48h) post operative fluid therapy, cumulated incidence of surgical post operative complications, cumulated incidence of medical post operative complications, need for mechanical ventilation, renal replacement therapy between surgery and day 28, SOFA score variation between pre operative period and 48h after surgery, number of days alive out of intensive care unit and out of hospital until day 28 Sample size calculation To ensure a power of 80%, a number of patients 130 (65 patients by group) will be necessary with a reduction of 13.6 (SD 24) points of the CCI score at day 28 in the intervention group. Because of a risk of neoplastic evolution between anaesthetic consultation and randomisation (10% of early cancellation), a total of 146 patients (73 by group) will be included in the study. Discussion In summary, ALBUCHIP study will be the first randomized clinical trial assessing efficacy of intraoperative use of 20% albumin combined with Ringer Lactate versus Ringer Lactate during CRS with HIPEC. Results yielded from this study will be helpful for vascular filling during CRS with HIPEC but, thanks to ancillary studies, to improve pathophysiological understanding of this surgery.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years
Updated: 2025-12-05
NCT07255469
Metabolic Fluid Responsiveness in Children
The investigators aim to validate markers of metabolic fluid-responsiveness in children with acute circulatory failure following cardiac surgery. This would allow physicians to identify which patient could benefit the most from fluid expansion, thus avoiding useless and potentially dangerous fluid expansions that could lead to fluid overload. To this end, The investigators will evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of the ratio of central venous to arterial carbon dioxide tension (Pv-aCO2) to arteriovenous oxygen content (CavO2), a simple biological marker of anaerobic metabolism, for the diagnosis of metabolic fluid responsiveness defined as a significant increase in oxygen consumption (VO2) after fluid expansion.
Gender: All
Ages: 0 Days - 15 Years
Updated: 2025-12-01
2 states
NCT06206434
Point of Care Ultrasound and Co-loading in Patients With Spinal-induced Hypotension and Cardiac Diseases
In elderly patients with cardiac diseases, changes in cardiovascular physiology diminish cardiovascular reserve and predispose to significant hemodynamic instability after spinal anesthesia; hence, such patients could be at risk of postoperative complications. Additionally, point of care ultrasound (POCUS) and transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) are used in clinical practice to evaluate cardiovascular hemodynamics. Inferior vena cava (IVC) and its collapsibility index (CI) have been used in clinical practice for the prediction of post-spinal hypotension. Specifically, the dIVCmax-to-IVCCI ratio \< 48 showed high diagnostic performance among other indices in the prediction of post spinal hypotension in elderly patients with cardiac diseases undergoing proximal fracture repair. Elderly patients also experience high likelihood of dehydration. According to the above findings, the investigators hypothesized that fluid co-loading immediately after spinal anesthesia can lower the incidence of spinal-induced hypotension in dehydrated patients. . For this reason, it is prospectively evaluated echocardiographic indices of the LV and the right ventricle (RV), as well as of the IVC prior to spinal anesthesia in elderly patients with proximal femur fractures who had low LV-EF and increased ratio of BUN-to-creatinine.
Gender: All
Ages: 70 Years - 100 Years
Updated: 2025-11-19
NCT07022314
Urine Output Response to Fluid and Diuretic Therapy in Cardiac ICU Patients Monitored With FIZE kUO®
This prospective observational study evaluates the real-time urine output response to fluid therapy and diuretics in cardiothoracic intensive care unit (CTICU) patients monitored with the FIZE kUO® device. The study aims to assess how continuous urine output monitoring can inform fluid management and improve patient outcomes post-cardiac surgery.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-06-15
NCT04201704
Effect of Giving Reduced Fluid in Children After Trauma
This study is designed to help decide how much intravenous (IV) fluid should be given to pediatric trauma patients. No standard currently exists for managing fluids in critically ill pediatric trauma patients, and many fluid strategies are now in practice. For decades, trauma patients got high volumes of IV fluid. Recent studies in adults show that patients actually do better by giving less fluid. The investigators do not know if this is true in children and this study is designed to answer that question and provide guidelines for IV fluid management in children after trauma.
Gender: All
Ages: 6 Months - 15 Years
Updated: 2025-05-04
2 states
NCT06900972
Effect of Colloids Versus Crystalloids on Heart Mechanics: a Double-blind Cross Over Randomized Trial
The debate over whether to use colloid or crystalloid solutions for fluid resuscitationis still ongoing. Colloid solutions consist of large molecules that generally cannot pass through healthy capillary membranes, whereas crystalloid solutions contain ions that easily move from the intravascular space to the interstitial compartment. Therefore, it is traditionally argued that colloids are more effective at expanding intravascular volume, with a suggested ratio of 1:3 compared to crystalloids. However, there is currently limited evidence to suggest that resuscitation with one type of fluid is more effective or safer than t he other. Despite these theoretically advantageousphysiological properties, colloids have not demonstrated a clear hemodynamic benefit over crystalloids. We hypothesized that these unexpected discrepancies may be attributed to different mechanical heart responses.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 60 Years
Updated: 2025-03-28
1 state
NCT05606536
The Impact of Intra-operative Fluid Infusion Rate on Microcirculation
Intraoperative fluid therapy (IFT) is an integral part of anesthesia care during surgery. Its main indication is the optimization of oxygen supply to the tissues. For elective surgery that is not associated with higher blood loss and a long period of preoperative fasting, including fluids IFT is dosed to cover the basal daily need for fluids. However, it is not clear whether this fluid dose is optimal. Surgery is a stress factor that leads, among other things, to damage of the endothelial glycocalyx (EG). EG binds a significant amount of plasma, which is released during EG destruction and causes relative hemodilution. Isovolumic hemodilution is an established intraoperative procedure that serves to better control bleeding in procedures where bleeding is expected. However, partial hemodilution occurs even with standard IFT, and even when fluids are hardly given at all. Flow parameters in microcirculation have not yet been described depending on IFT conduction. The parameters of the microcirculation reflect its functioning, which will consequently affect the postoperative phase of the patient's moaning and clinical outcome.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-03-27
NCT06258616
Fluid Administration and Fluid Accumulation in the Intensive Care Unit
The goal of this international inception cohort study is to describe fluid administration during admittance to the intensive care unit (ICU), and provide contemporary epidemiological data on fluid accumulation, risk factors, management and outcome in critically ill adult patients.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-02-06
1 state
NCT06396884
Hemodynamic Optimization During Spinal Anesthesia in the Elderly
In elderly patients over 65 years of age, proximal femur fracture is the most common type of fracture, and surgical intervention is typically required for the majority of cases. Subarachnoid anesthesia is commonly used for this type of surgery. The objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of continuous non-invasive blood pressure and hemodynamic monitoring compared to traditional methods of blood pressure measurement in reducing the duration of hospitalization and the incidence of post-operative complications in elderly patients undergoing surgery for femur fracture under subarachnoid anesthesia.
Gender: All
Ages: 65 Years - 99 Years
Updated: 2024-10-23
NCT06249568
Evaluation of Fluid Responsiveness With Recruitment Maneuver After Sternotomy in Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery
Assuming that the basic reliability of dynamic indices will increase with the application of functional hemodynamic tests after sternotomy and protective lung ventilation in patients undergoing elective coronary artery bypass surgery, it is useful to predict fluid responsiveness after sternotomy in coronary artery bypass surgery patients ventilated with 6 ml/kg PBW (ideal body weight). We aimed to reveal the sensitivity and specificity of PPV and SVV changes by applying a lung opening maneuver.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years
Updated: 2024-07-16
NCT05369559
Mini Bolus for Fluid Challenge Responsiveness in the Emergency Department
Intravascular volume expansion is a common intervention in critically ill patients with acute circulatory failure.we test the hypothesis that a mini-bolus fluid challenge, of either 50 ml , can predict fluid responsiveness in spontaneously breathing patients with hemodynamic instability.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years
Updated: 2024-07-09