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Genital Prolapse clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Genital Prolapse.

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NCT ID: NCT00771225 Active, not recruiting - Genital Prolapse Clinical Trials

National,Multicentric Randomised Study of the Correction of Genital Prolapse With Fascial Repair or Mesh-Prolift

Start date: November 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

180 women with genital prolapse will be submitted to genital prolapse surgical correction, half of them with human fascia, and the other half with Prolift.

NCT ID: NCT00747370 Completed - Clinical trials for Stress Urinary Incontinence

Dynamic MRI of the Behaviour of Female Pelvic Floor

Start date: January 2002
Phase: Phase 0
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to test the suitability of dynamic magnetic resonance imaging for the pelvic floor floor, bladder neck and urethra in healthy volunteers, in stress incontinent patient and in women with genital prolapse.

NCT ID: NCT00554944 Withdrawn - Obesity Clinical Trials

Intraoperative Goal-directed Fluid Management

Start date: June 2007
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose to determine esophageal Doppler goal-directed fluid requirements in lean, overweight, obese, and morbidly obese patients with the goal of developing a body mass index (BMI)-specific fluid replacement strategy. Specifically, th investigators will test the hypothesis that perioperative fluid requirements on a per-kg basis varies as a function of BMI. Individuals scheduled for elective, open abdominal surgeries, vaginal hysterectomies or genital prolapse repair will be eligible to participate

NCT ID: NCT00551551 Completed - Clinical trials for Urinary Incontinence

Prenatal Pelvic Floor Prevention (3PN)

Start date: November 2007
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Objective: Compare pelvic floor disorders (urinary incontinence, anal incontinence, genital prolapse, perineal pain, sexual troubles) 12 month after a first delivery between a group of women with prenatal pelvic floor exercises and a control group. Hypothesis: Prenatal pelvic floor exercises reduce postpartum urinary incontinence.