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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to develop a way to perform safer surgery in the eye socket. The eye and its surrounding structures are very delicate and can easily be damaged from surgery. A laser may act as a gentle knife to cut the tissue. Currently, this is done with a small scissors and knife, but it could be done with gentle laser. By using an endoscope, the surgery could be much safer and faster. Vanderbilt has a Free Electron Laser, which could be used to make a small hole in the coverings around the optic nerve to treat certain diseases. Before it is used in seeing eyes, the laser must be tested on eyes which are to be removed during an enucleation to prove that it does not damage the optic nerve The standard enucleation (removal of your blind painful eye) will be performed. This procedure will be performed at the Free Electron Laser Center Operating Room, which is a fully equipped operating room currently being used for outpatient surgery. The post-operative recovery room setting is similar to the post-operative recovery room in the previously used area. This includes general anesthesia with a breathing tube in your throat, injecting an anesthetic liquid behind the eye for comfort after surgery, and removing the eyeball. Enucleations must be performed under general anesthesia or intravenous sedation with a retrobulbar injection (injection behind the eye). The anesthesiologist will determine which is safer to perform. The removed globe will be replaced with a spherical implant. Just prior to the removal of the eyeball, a small opening will be made in the coverings around your optic nerve (the cable exiting the eyeball) with the endoscopic laser or with a knife and scissors. The procedure should not take much longer than the standard eye removal. The procedure will be identical to the standard enucleation (eye removal) except for making the tiny hole in the coverings of the optic nerve, which should take about 15 to 30 minutes.

The laser is very tissue specific. It only reacts with certain types of tissue and should not damage the surrounding tissue.

There will be no additional costs to you associated with the study portion of the procedure.


Clinical Trial Description

The purpose of this study is to develop a way to perform safer surgery in the eye socket. The eye and its surrounding structures are very delicate and can easily be damaged from surgery. A laser may act as a gentle knife to cut the tissue. Currently, this is done with a small scissors and knife, but it could be done with gentle laser. By using an endoscope, the surgery could be much safer and faster. Vanderbilt has a Free Electron Laser, which could be used to make a small hole in the coverings around the optic nerve to treat certain diseases. Before it is used in seeing eyes, the laser must be tested on eyes which are to be removed during an enucleation to prove that it does not damage the optic nerve The standard enucleation (removal of your blind painful eye) will be performed. This procedure will be performed at the Free Electron Laser Center Operating Room, which is a fully equipped operating room currently being used for outpatient surgery. The post-operative recovery room setting is similar to the post-operative recovery room in the previously used area. This includes general anesthesia with a breathing tube in your throat, injecting an anesthetic liquid behind the eye for comfort after surgery, and removing the eyeball. Enucleations must be performed under general anesthesia or intravenous sedation with a retrobulbar injection (injection behind the eye). The anesthesiologist will determine which is safer to perform. The removed globe will be replaced with a spherical implant. Just prior to the removal of the eyeball, a small opening will be made in the coverings around your optic nerve (the cable exiting the eyeball) with the endoscopic laser or with a knife and scissors. The procedure should not take much longer than the standard eye removal. The procedure will be identical to the standard enucleation (eye removal) except for making the tiny hole in the coverings of the optic nerve, which should take about 15 to 30 minutes.

The laser is very tissue specific. It only reacts with certain types of tissue and should not damage the surrounding tissue.

There will be no additional costs to you associated with the study portion of the procedure. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00337961
Study type Interventional
Source Vanderbilt University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date July 2000
Completion date December 2006

See also
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Active, not recruiting NCT04431882 - The Role of Optic Nerve Sheath Fenestration in Leukemic Patients Having Increased Intracranial Pressure Phase 2/Phase 3