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Nasal Septum Deviation clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Nasal Septum Deviation.

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NCT ID: NCT03501563 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Nasal Septum Deviation

Effects of Hypotensive Anesthesia on Thiol Disulphide Balance

Start date: April 5, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Oxidative stress at the cellular level and the effects of the antioxidant system on the anesthetic drugs make the anesthesia method more important. Hypotensive anesthesia or controlled hypotension is an anesthetic technique routinely used in many operations (ENT, orthopedic, plastic surgery, etc.) to reduce intraoperative bleeding and to provide a more open surgical area. In this study, investigators aimed to investigate the effects of hypotensive anesthesia on thiol / disulfide balance from oxidative stress markers. Hypotensive anesthesia is caused by hypoperfusion and hypoxia-induced oxidative stresses at the tissue level and can initiate cell damage. Many methods can be used alone or in combination to create hypotensive anesthesia. İnvestigators will investigate whether hypotensive anesthesia causes an effect on the cellular level.

NCT ID: NCT01943929 Recruiting - Headache Clinical Trials

Correlation Between Headaches and Septum and Nasal Mucosa Contact

Start date: November 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Headache is the most common complaint to neurologists. In the 80´s and 90's few papers, with limited number of patients, have proposed the association between nasal septum contact and headache. The International Classification of Headaches Disorders proposed specific diagnostic criteria for this entity. With the major use of CT scans, the contact between nasal mucosa and septum is daily observed in many patients without complaint of headache. The purpose of this study is to determine if there is any correlation between nasal and septum mucosa contact and the prevalence of headache. The investigators hypothesized that no correlation will be found using CT scans in a large series of patients.