Effect of Hyperoxia or Hypoxemia on Delirium Incidence After Cardiac Surgery
Summary
A new observational clinical study (NCT07548905) registered on ClinicalTrials.gov aims to examine the effect of hyperoxia or hypoxemia on the incidence of delirium in patients following cardiac surgery. The study lists four conditions: Cardiac Surgery, Delirium Postoperative, Hyperoxia, and Hypoxemia. This registry entry documents the study's purpose and parameters for public transparency and research participation.
“Our goal was to study the effect of hyperoxia or hypoxemia on the incidence of delirium in patients after cardiac surgery.”
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ClinicalTrials.gov is the NIH-run registry of every clinical trial conducted in the United States, plus most international trials sponsored by US-based companies or institutions. By federal law, sponsors must register Phase 2 through Phase 4 studies before enrolling patients and post results within a year of completion. This feed tracks every new trial registration and study update, around 700 a month: drug interventions, device studies, behavioral protocols, observational research. Watch this if you scout drug candidates moving into mid or late-stage development, monitor competitor pipelines, or follow rare disease research where new trials signal patient hope. GovPing parses sponsor, phase, intervention, and target indication on each entry.
What changed
This ClinicalTrials.gov registry entry documents a new observational study (NCT07548905) titled 'Effect of Hyperoxia or Hypoxemia on the Incidence of Delirium in Patients After Cardiac Surgery.' The study focuses on understanding whether abnormal oxygen levels during or after cardiac surgery correlate with delirium occurrence. This is a standard clinical trial registry posting providing public transparency on ongoing research.
Healthcare institutions and clinical investigators involved in cardiac surgery care should be aware of this research direction, as it may inform future protocols around oxygen management during cardiac procedures. Patients undergoing cardiac surgery may seek participation opportunities, and researchers studying postoperative cognitive complications may find relevant collaboration pathways.
Archived snapshot
Apr 23, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Effect of Hyperoxia or Hypoxemia on the Incidence of Delirium in Patients After Cardiac Surgery
Observational NCT07548905 Kind: OBSERVATIONAL Apr 23, 2026
Abstract
Our goal was to study the effect of hyperoxia or hypoxemia on the incidence of delirium in patients after cardiac surgery.
Conditions: Cardiac Surgery, Delirium - Postoperative, Hyperoxia, Hypoxemia
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