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NCT01366976COMPLETEDanonymous

Inhibition of Lipid Peroxidation During Cardiopulmonary Bypass

Sponsor

Source record

Vanderbilt University

Phase

Source record

NA

Modality

AI-normalized

small molecule

Target

AI-normalized

Acetaminophen

Indication / condition

AI-normalized

Cardiopulmonary Bypass Induced Lipid Peroxidation

Intervention

Source record

Acetaminophen

Source & freshness

Source record

NCT ID

NCT01366976

Original source

ClinicalTrials.gov

Source last updated

Jan 27, 2015

Ingested at

Jun 08, 2026

Internal sync

Jun 08, 2026

Model version

trialsignal-ai-v1

Normalized confidence

96%

Validation status

validated

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View original source fields

NCT ID

NCT01366976

Title

Inhibition of Lipid Peroxidation During Cardiopulmonary Bypass

Sponsor

Vanderbilt University

Status

COMPLETED

Phase

NA

Condition raw

Cardiopulmonary Bypass Induced Lipid Peroxidation

Condition normalized

Cardiopulmonary Bypass Induced Lipid Peroxidation

Modality raw

small molecule

Modality normalized

small molecule

Target raw

Acetaminophen

Target normalized

Acetaminophen

Interventions

Acetaminophen

Public preview

Source record

Acute kidney injury is a major complication of cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Hemolysis and rhabdomyolysis frequently occur during CPB. Hemolysis leads to an increase in free hemoglobin, whereas rhabdomyolysis leads to an increase in myoglobin. Free plasma hemoglobin and myoglobin have been shown to be independent predictors of the acute kidney injury that results from CPB. When these hemeproteins are released into the plasma, they undergo redox cycling, generating radical species that initiate lipid peroxidation and a cascade of oxidative damage to cellular membranes, notably in the kidney. F2-isoprostanes and isofurans are sensitive and specific markers of oxidative stress in vivo, and are increased after CPB, particularly in those patients with acute kidney injury. Acetaminophen inhibits the lipid peroxidation catalyzed by myoglobin and hemoglobin. Moreover, in an animal model of rhabdomyolysis-induced kidney injury, acetaminophen significantly attenuated the decrease in creatinine clearance compared to control. The current proposal tests the central hypothesis that acetaminophen will attenuate the lipid peroxidation associated with the hemolysis and rhabdomyolysis that occur in patients undergoing CPB. Demonstration that acetaminophen inhibits the lipid peroxidation resulting from CPB would provide a rationale for a prospective randomized trial to test the hypothesis that acetaminophen will reduce the acute kidney injury that results from CPB.

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