← Back to Clinical Trials
Recruiting NCT03559569

Impact of Endothelial and Leukocyte Senescence in Circulatory Shock States

◆ AI Clinical Summary
Plain-language summary for patients

Trial Parameters

Condition Shock
Sponsor University Hospital, Strasbourg, France
Study Type OBSERVATIONAL
Phase N/A
Enrollment 520
Sex ALL
Min Age 18 Years
Max Age N/A
Start Date 2019-01-07
Completion 2028-02
Interventions
Biological samples will be done to evaluate the endothelial and leukocyte senescence.

Eligibility Fast-Check

Enter your details for a quick preliminary check. This does not replace medical advice.

Brief Summary

Circulatory shocks (CS) are life-threatening, acute organ dysfunction. Advances in critical care medicine have decreased early hospital mortality, increasing the number of surviving patients. Regrettably, these survivors are at increased risk of new infections but also of cardiovascular disease. The investigators hypothesize that CS with multi-organ dysfunction is associated with premature senescence of endothelial cells and immune cells and promotes endothelial thrombogenicity and immunosenescence leading to cardiovascular disease and secondary infections. The aim of this work is therefore to evaluate the contribution of endothelial and leucocytes senescence to the occurrence of secondary events (infectious and cardiovascular) in patients with a CS. It will provide a better understanding of the pathogenesis of cardiovascular and immune diseases following a CS, likely to guide new management strategies to prevent their occurrence.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion criteria: * Circulatory shock * patient with health care insurance Exclusion criteria: * Patients' refusal to participate in clinical research * Pregnant woman * Breastfeeding woman * A patient with a protective order

Related Trials

ClinicalMetric — Independent clinical trial intelligence platform. Not affiliated with NIH, ClinicalTrials.gov, the U.S. FDA, or any pharmaceutical company, hospital, or clinical research organization. Trial data is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Do not make any treatment, enrollment, or health decisions based solely on information found here — always consult a qualified healthcare professional. Full Disclaimer  ·  Last Reviewed: April 2026  ·  Data Methodology
}