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Sonoelastography clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Sonoelastography.

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NCT ID: NCT06222281 Not yet recruiting - Sonoelastography Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Shoulder Strength and Deltoid Stiffness After Reverse Shoulder Arthroplasty (RSA)

Start date: January 30, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this observational study is to test the strength of the shoulder joint and elasticity of the deltoid muscle of the patients who had a reverse shoulder arthroplasty. The main questions are: • Whether there is a difference between the operated and healthy shoulders in terms of strength and deltoid elasticity of the patients. • Is there any correlation between the functional status, elasticity and strength of the operated shoulder? Participants will be asked to attend the isokinetic shoulder strength tests and shear wawe ultrasound elastography measurements. They will be also asked to fill the quick DASH and Constant score forms.

NCT ID: NCT04759521 Completed - Chronic Hepatitis B Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Liver Fibrosis With 2D-Shear Wave Elastography

Start date: January 3, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The aims of this study are to evaluate liver fibrosis with two-dimensional (2D) shear wave elastography (SWE) technique in inactive hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers and patients with active chronic hepatitis B (CHB), with the help of a propagation map, compare this method with histopathological results in patients with CHB and determine the suitability of 2D-SWE for use instead of liver biopsy by evaluating fibrosis before and after treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02372682 Completed - Cirrhosis Clinical Trials

Shear Wave Sonoelastography in Pediatric Liver Fibrosis

Start date: May 11, 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Reliable methods of evaluating liver fibrosis using noninvasive techniques in the pediatric population are limited and inconclusive. Liver biopsy remains the gold standard; however, it requires sedation in pediatric patients, has a risk of hemorrhage, and provides unreliable results secondary to sampling error. Sonoelastography is a new method of evaluating liver disease that eliminates these pitfalls. There are 3 types of quantitative sonoelastography currently in use. Transient elastography is a non-imaging based technique used in adults to measure liver fibrosis in which a mechanical vibrator creates a low-frequency wave causing shear stress in the liver at a fixed depth. This technique does not work in small livers and, therefore, is not appropriate for pediatric patients. Acoustic Radiation Force Impulse Imaging (ARFI) and Shear Wave Imaging (SWE) use real-time ultrasonography and administer focused high-intensity, short-duration pulses to produce shear waves in the liver tissue. ARFI calculates the degree of tissue displacement and creates an elastogram or measurement of the stiffness of the sampled liver tissue without corresponding images. It is limited since only a small sample or region of interest (ROI) can be obtained, and it is unable to provide a corresponding elasticity map of the tissue. SWE is the newest elastography technique. It measures tiny displacements of tissue in a larger ROI with corresponding ultrasound images which provides a side by side image of the liver and color-coded elasticity map of the sampled tissue. Advantages include a larger ROI and simultaneous viewing of the selected region of interest which provides better anatomic detail with a corresponding color map of the tissue elasticity which may result in more accurate scoring of the stage of fibrosis. There are a few studies of ARFI in the pediatric population. Studies using SWE for evaluation of liver fibrosis are also few, and, all but one in adults. However, these studies have shown it to be an accurate method for liver fibrosis staging. Use of SWE in assessing liver fibrosis in pediatric patients may represent an accurate noninvasive alternative to liver biopsy in evaluating liver fibrosis as well as avoid the use of sedation.