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Tundra lists 11 General Surgery clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT04789733
The GUARDIAN Pilot Trial
The treatments will be: 1) norepinephrine or phenylephrine infusion to maintain intraoperative MAP ≥85 mmHg, delayed resumption of chronic antihypertensive medications, and a target ward MAP ≥80 mmHg (tight pressure management); or, 2) routine intraoperative blood pressure management and prompt resumption of chronic antihypertensive medications (routine pressure management).
Gender: All
Ages: 45 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-03-17
1 state
NCT05430659
Intraoperative Estimated Blood Loss, Blood Transfusion, and Postoperative Clinical Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Non Cardiac Surgery, Siriraj Hospital
After review literature, Siriraj hospital has not unanimous protocol to guide proper preoperative anemia and blood transfusion. This retrospective study will review non-cardiac surgery cases and collect data such as demographic data, surgical procedures, anesthetic techniques, preoperative hemoglobin level, intraoperative estimate blood loss, blood transfusion, and post operative complication in Siriraj hospital which has many patients undergo various operations. This study can be model to develop preoperative anemia management guideline in Siriraj Preanesthesia Assessment Center (SIPAC), Siriraj hospital and reduce risk and adverse outcomes after blood transfusion in the future.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-03-06
1 state
NCT05571722
Linezolid or Vancomycin Surgical Site Infection Prophylaxis
Anesthesia and surgical guidelines recommend the administration of a surgical antibiotic prophylaxis for patients undergoing "clean" surgery. The prescribed antibiotic should target the bacteria most commonly found in surgical site infections (SSIs) and the duration of administration should not exceed 24 hours to minimize the ecological risk of bacterial resistance emergence. Guidelines provide a framework for the administration of surgical antibiotic prophylaxis but their effectiveness is regularly re-evaluated by measuring the rates of SSIs and the microorganisms responsible for infectious complications after surgery. The majority of interventions required the use of first or second generation cephalosporins as surgical antibiotic prophylaxis. For patients with allergy to beta-lactams, clindamycin and vancomycin are proposed as alternatives. In the patients with methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) colonization or if those at risk of developing MRSA-associated SSI (hospital ecology, previous antibiotic treatment), only vancomycin is recommended. Vancomycin pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics is complex and its tissue absorption varies according to the level of tissue inflammation. This is a difficult molecule to handle, exclusively administered via intravenous route. Linezolid is a synthetic antibiotic from the oxazolidinone class. By binding to the rRNA on the 30S and 50S ribosomal subunits, it inhibits the bacterial synthesis. It is therefore a bacteriostatic antibiotic approved for the treatment of both methicillin susceptible S. aureus (MSSA) and MRSA infections. It also covers a broad spectrum of Gram positive bacteria. Its pharmacokinetics allows rapid intravenous infusion, with rapid penetration into bone and soft tissue of the surgical site during hip surgery. A large Cochrane meta-analysis reported that linezolid was superior to vancomycin in skin infections, including MRSA infections, albeit with low quality evidence. We therefore hypothesized that linezolid can be used instead of vancomycin for beta-lactam allergic patients and patients at risk of MRSA-associated SSI in general surgery.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-02-05
NCT06584825
Enhanced Vitals Monitoring After Major Surgery Trial
The aim of this clinical trial is to examine the feasibility of an enhanced vital sign monitoring solution in-hospital and at-home. This study includes adult patients undergoing inpatient major vascular or abdominal surgery. Researchers will compare the enhanced vitals monitoring group to the standard of care group to see if it may change post-operative management and outcomes. The primary question it aims to answer is if enhanced monitoring of surgical patient vitals can increase the number of days at home alive in the first 30 days after surgery. Participants in the intervention group will test two vitals monitoring devices, one in the hospital and one at home. They will also be asked to complete several questionnaires and a follow up phone call.
Gender: All
Ages: 19 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-11-21
1 state
NCT07183124
3D Modeling for Detecting Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer With Positive Circumferential Resection Margin
This retrospective study aims to develop an AI-assisted 3D modeling system to improve staging accuracy for stage II-III locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC). High-quality CT images from Taichung Veterans General Hospital will be used to reconstruct tumor boundaries and spatial relationships. The AI model will be trained and validated against MRI and pathology results to predict circumferential resection margin (CRM) status. Outcomes include sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and agreement with standard imaging. This system seeks to support precise tumor staging and inform future clinical decision-making.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-09-19
NCT06023069
Preoperative Walking Evaluation and Postoperative Outcome
The hypothesis is that physical activity is associated with a reduced risk of complications and death after surgery. Self-reporting of physical activity is prone to be unreliable. In order to obtain a better picture of patients' physical activity, we intend to investigate the association between the average number of steps and postoperative outcomes. Many other objective measures of physical activity are costly and time-consuming to perform; for example, exercise tests, extensive sampling, and longer questionnaires. The primary research question is: Do patients with a higher degree of physical activity, measured as the average number of steps recorded on the patient's mobile phone, have a reduced risk of peri/postoperative complications and death, measured as Days At Home alive at 30 days (DAH30)? Secondary research questions include: Is physical activity, measured as the average number of steps recorded on the patient's mobile phone, linearly linked to DAH30? Is physical activity, measured as the average number of steps recorded on the patient's mobile phone, associated with specific peri/postoperative organ impact, such as lung, heart, cerebral, infection, or kidney complications? Is physical activity, measured as the average number of steps recorded on the patient's mobile phone, also linked to long-term outcomes one year after surgery? Is physical activity, measured as the average number of steps recorded on the patient's mobile phone, solely associated with DAH30 and organ complications for specific patient groups in terms of age, comorbidities, and/or type of surgery?
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-09-03
NCT06678360
Perioperative Impact of Physical Activity on Short- and Long-term Morbidity and Mortality
Over 300 million surgeries are performed globally every year. Complications after surgery - infections, cardiovascular conditions, postoperative pulmonary complications and renal impairment - affect survival and quality of life. Age and co-morbidity are unmodifiable factors, contributing to increased risk of these perioperative complications. However, a modifiable risk factor is physical activity. This study aims to test if self reported physical activity is associated to lower risk of perioperative morbidity and mortality.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2025-06-06
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
NCT06713824
Neoadjuvant Radiotherapy Before Surgery for Rectal Cancer, Surgical and Oncological Outcome Analysis, Retrospective Case Control Study in a Single Institute.
Pre-operative radiotherapy for clinical stage 3 rectal cancer outcome analysis, retrospective case-control study.
Gender: All
Ages: 20 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-12-03
NCT02222844
Improving Radical Treatment Through MRI Evaluation of Pelvic Sigmoid Cancers
Patients with suspected or proven sigmoid colon adenocarcinoma, eligible for curative treatment whose MRI can be reviewed prior to surgery and has no decision regarding radical treatment are eligible. Patient are randomised to the control arm which the standard care of preoperative CT imaging and subsequent discussion by the Multidisciplinary Team or the interventional arm which has the additional use of MRI imaging and subsequent discussion by the Multidisciplinary Team. Patients are followed up at 1 and 3 years together with QoL questionnaires.
Gender: All
Ages: 16 Years - Any
Updated: 2024-10-17
13 states
NCT06209983
The Effect of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) in Gastric Cancer Surgery
The investigators aimed to clarify the clinical relevance of the ERAS protocol by evaluating the perioperative course in patients undergoing laparoscopic gastric cancer surgery.
Gender: All
Ages: 20 Years - 80 Years
Updated: 2024-02-28