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Blood volume measurements are a critical step in the emergency care of trauma patients. The typical approach to this is to rely on historical information, physical examination and metrics such as heart rate. There is currently no good real-time measure to track blood volume. This study investigates the use of phonocardiography (listening to the sounds made by the heart) to track changes in central blood volume.
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Blood draw subjects:
Participation in this study group may last up to 60 minutes. Participants will begin with a brief medical exam to determine eligibility. This will include a review of any history of cardiovascular disease and of medications. Prior to a scheduled blood draw, eligible participates will have physiological measurements taken, which may include phonocardiographic measurements, cardiac output, plethysmography (volume changes), multifrequency bioimpedance, thoracic impedance, heart rate, blood pressure, pulse oximetry, continuous non-invasive hematocrit measurement, and respiration. The phonocardiographic measurements may be taken with both a commercial and a custom-built device. These are all non-invasive measurements. After 15 minutes of baseline measurements, a blood draw will proceed normally while the physiological measurements continue. After the participant is finished donating blood, the participant will be asked to stay in place for an additional 15 minutes to continue to collect physiological data. Participants are asked not to eat or drink during the 15 minutes as this will provide better data collection. The information collected as data for this study includes: information about medical history, body measurements, and physiological measurements.
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Lower Body Negative Pressure (LBNP) participants:
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Blood draw participants:
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Exclusion Criteria:
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0 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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