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Surgical Abortion clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05532085 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Assessment of Pain During an Abortion With Knowledge of the Predictive Factors of Pain.

Start date: June 12, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Two studies carried out in 2011 at the Center for Contraception and Voluntary Interruption of Pregnancy (CIVG) at the Louis-Mourier Hospital, evaluated the pain of patients undergoing an abortion, and looked for predictors of the pain felt during an abortion. medication or aspiration under local anesthesia. These predictive factors of pain are today integrated into the interview during a request for abortion at the CIVG of Louis-Mourier. This new study, on care data, prospective and monocentric conducted at the CIVG, of the Louis Mourier hospital, will make it possible to verify whether the knowledge of these predictive factors of pain has made it possible to improve the management of pain in women undergoing an abortion. The main objective is to assess the pain felt by the patient during a medical abortion or by aspiration under local anesthesia, knowing the predictive factors of pain highlighted by two studies carried out in 2011. The secondary objective is to highlight a significant difference in pain after application of an analgesic protocol indexed on predictive factors of pain. The study will be carried out in two successive periods: A first period of 4 months will consist in evaluating the pain felt by women having a medical abortion or by aspiration under local anesthesia. A second period of 4 months will evaluate the pain felt by women undergoing medical or aspiration abortion under local anesthesia following the application of an analgesic protocol indexed on the predictive factors of pain. The expected benefit of this study is the improvement of care and professional practices for better management of pain during outpatient abortion. The abortion will take place in the usual way according to the chosen method. An information and non-objection note will be distributed to patients during the first consultation for an abortion. Patients agreeing to participate in the study will answer the usual questions from the doctor or nurse. A data collection sheet related to care will be integrated into the medical records. The CIVG doctors taking part in the study will report the data collected on this form. The maximum pain felt during the abortion and in the following 4 days will be evaluated using an VAS according to usual practice.

NCT ID: NCT05360186 Recruiting - Clinical trials for First Trimester Abortion

New Cross-linked Hyaluronan Gel to Prevent Adhesion After USG-MVA: RCT

Start date: June 14, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The objective of this prospective, randomized controlled study was to evaluate the effectiveness of this NCH gel in the prevention of IUA development as assessed by hysteroscopy after USG-MVA, in the treatment for first-trimester miscarriage. - To study the severity and extent of the IUA as assessed by the AFS and ESGE adhesion score in both groups of patients. - To examine the rate of complications or side effects with the NCH gel. - To assess the subsequent menstrual history and reproductive outcome in both groups of patients.

NCT ID: NCT04969900 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

Effects of Aromatherapy on Patient Satisfaction With Surgical Abortion at Less Than 10 Weeks Gestation

Start date: April 19, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators propose a single-site, double-blinded, placebo-controlled clinical trial of lavender aromatherapy versus placebo for patient satisfaction in adult women having a surgical abortion before 10 weeks and 0 days gestation. The investigators will evaluate whether lavender aromatherapy is an effective adjunct therapy for patient satisfaction during first trimester surgical abortion. The investigators will measure satisfaction using the Iowa Satisfaction with Anesthesia Scale (ISAS). The investigators hypothesize that women receiving lavender aromatherapy will report higher satisfaction scores compared to women receiving placebo. Prior studies have investigated the use of aromatherapy in laboring patients, in menstruating women, and in general post-operative populations. No investigations have focused on the use of lavender aromatherapy as an adjunct therapy to paracervical block and/or oral narcotics and anxiolytics in outpatient surgical abortion. Our study is novel in investigating patient satisfaction with first trimester surgical abortion using lavender aromatherapy. The contribution of this proposed research to the literature is significant because current affordable anesthetic adjuncts to opioids and benzodiazepines are limited.

NCT ID: NCT04708808 Recruiting - Pain Clinical Trials

The Effect of Music Therapy Under Ultrasound Guided Manual Vacuum Aspiration

Start date: August 30, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Manual vacuum aspiration (MVA) is one of the surgical treatment options for managing early pregnancy loss. When compared to traditional surgical method; MVA is safer, more cost-effective, due to its shorter hospitalisation period and not undergo the risk of general anaesthesia. The MVA procedure is performed under local anaesthesia and analgesics is given prior the procedure. However, majority of patients still complaint significant pain during the procedure. In our previous study, the investigator found women had high anxiety and stress levels when undergo miscarriage and the operation. Pain perception may further be affected by one's psychological state at the time of the procedure. Therefore reducing the patient's anxiety during the USG-MVA may further improve the patient's pain control and overall acceptance of the procedure. Music can act as a distracter and has a calming effect which turn the patient's attention away from negative stimuli. Yet, there has been no RCTs to investigate the beneficial effect of music therapy in pain control or reducing anxiety levels during USG-MVA. The investigator hypothesis the intervention of music therapy to our current pain control will reduce the pain and anxiety levels experienced by our patients during USG-MVA. Thus, there is a need to conduct an RCT to test our hypothesis. The study is conducted in an university affilated hospital for women undergo the USG-MVA procedure. The primary outcome is to evaluate in between group difference in the pain intensity after the USG-guided MVA procedure. The secondary outcome is to evaluate the difference in anxiety level . Case is randomized to music and non music group, Bluetooth headphone are provided during the procedure and case can choose their favourite songs. The outcome are measured by the self rated instrument: Visual analogue scale and the STAI trait anxiety score and the physiological measure salivary alpha amylase (sAA )score. The pain score and the anxiety level is measured pre operatively, immediate after the procedure and 2 hours post operatively. The SPSS-26 will be used for statistics analysis.

NCT ID: NCT03043014 Completed - Surgical Abortion Clinical Trials

Cervical Preparation of Abortions Under Paracervical Block in the First Trimester:

BPCEN
Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Surgical abortion is one of the most frequently surgery of women in the world. 43 millions are annually performed in the world. 90% of the abortions are performed during the first trimester of pregnancy before 13 weeks. Legal surgical abortion during the first trimester of pregnancy is a low risk intervention with a mortality rate lower than 1/100 000 abortions, with a risk of complications from 0.3 % to 3.4 %.

NCT ID: NCT02922504 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Impact of Music Intervention on Pain Control In First Trimester Surgical Abortion Under Local Anesthesia

AlgoMusic
Start date: October 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A surgical abortion under local anesthesia is potentially painful. A protocol using analgetic is systematically used. Also the protocol is relevant , the question of taking care of the pain in a safe manner remains. The use of Music during surgery can have a real effect on pain and anxiety. This study has for goal to evalued the use of music on pain as adjuvant treatement instead of a standard care for an abortion.

NCT ID: NCT01937988 Completed - Surgical Abortion Clinical Trials

Patient Support During Surgical Abortion

Start date: May 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will be a non-blinded randomized controlled trial (RCT) of women presenting for abortion at <13 6/7 weeks. Women will be randomized either to receive support by a trained abortion doula (intervention) or to have standard procedure (control) during the abortion procedure. The investigators hypothesize that women who receive doula support during a first trimester abortion will report less pain during the abortion procedure compared to women who do not receive abortion doula support.

NCT ID: NCT01795599 Recruiting - Surgical Abortion Clinical Trials

Cervical Preparation for Surgical Abortion at 12-14 Weeks: a Prospective, Randomized, Evaluator-blinded, Multicenter, Controlled Comparison Between Mifepristone, Misoprostol and Their Combination

Start date: May 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

More than 100 000 surgical abortions are annually performed in France. About four in ten women will have an abortion in their life. Abortion complications are cervical tearing (0.1-1.18%), uterine perforation (0.09-19.8‰), hemorrhage (1.5‰) and infection (5-20%). These complications can first compromise the vital prognosis and are involved in 10% of the worldwide maternal mortality (20 000 women by year), then lead to infertility which is hard to treat (uterine synechiae) or impossible to treat (hysterectomy for control of bleeding), and are finally responsible for obstetrical pathologies as late miscarriages or premature delivery due to cervical insufficiency. All that complications are linked to cervical laceration of the surgical abortion, that can be reduced by the recommended use of mifepristone or misoprostol as cervical preparation for the abortions after 12 weeks. However, it does not exist data evaluating the superiority of one of the two molecules or their combination. These data could optimize the cervical preparation and thus reduce the abortion complications with a direct impact on maternal mortality, infertility and obstetrical complications. Thus, it seems to be important to evaluate these two molecules and their combination. Objectives To compare mifepristone, misoprostol and their combination in the cervical preparation of the surgical abortion between 12 and14 weeks for their efficacy, complications and side-effects.

NCT ID: NCT00617097 Completed - Pain Clinical Trials

Paracervical Block in First Trimester Surgical Abortions

Start date: January 2008
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The investigators primary objective is to study the analgesic effects of combined ketorolac and lidocaine in a paracervical block compared to preoperative ibuprofen followed by intra-operative paracervical block with lidocaine alone on women undergoing first trimester surgical abortions. The investigators hypothesize that women who receive a paracervical block of combined ketorolac and lidocaine will experience less pain during the procedure based on a visual analog scale (VAS) compared to those who receive preoperative ibuprofen and a paracervical block with lidocaine alone. This randomized, multi-site, placebo-controlled clinical trial will investigate the difference in perceived pain from first trimester surgical abortions using a paracervical block of combined ketorolac and lidocaine compared to preoperative ibuprofen and paracervical block with lidocaine alone. A total of fifty women who are seeking elective surgical abortions of intrauterine pregnancies less than 11 0/7 weeks' gestation will be recruited from Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, Planned Parenthood of Maryland in Baltimore, Maryland and Planned Parenthood Columbia-Willamette in Portland, Oregon. Pain before, during, and after surgical abortion will be measured using a 100-mm VAS. The primary outcome of interest is the mean difference in pain level from preoperative baseline to time after cervical dilation comparing the treatment groups. If the investigators see greater pain reduction associated with the paracervical block of lidocaine and ketorolac, adoption of this regimen may improve pain management during first trimester surgical abortions. If combined ketorolac and lidocaine when administered as a paracervical block is proven to be efficacious, the need for additional analgesia in first trimester surgical abortions can be minimized.