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Surgical Procedure, Unspecified clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05736016 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

Medial Wedge Insoles to Improve Gait in Persons After Total Hip Replacement

Start date: February 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study will test the hypothesis, that the use of medial wedge insoles in people participating in comprehensive rehabilitation between 1-6 months after total hip replacement, and not having a varus deformity of the knee or symptomatic arthrosis of the medial knee compartment, will improve patient's functioning, the symmetry of gait and stance compared to persons using sham insoles. The participants will undergo a 6-week program of in-patient rehabilitation aimed at: pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic pain management, improvement of vascular function, cardiopulmonary function, functions of skeletal muscles, range of motion and stability of peripheral joints, gait function, body position. The rehabilitation program will also address individual needs with psychotherapy and vocational therapy. The study will help to identify correlations between gait parameter change and functional improvement during the rehabilitation following THR. Study participants will be provided with individually made corrective medial wedge insoles or sham insoles and instructed to use them during gait training and everyday activities. Functional parameters will be examined at the study entry, at the end of 6 weeks of intervention, and 6 weeks following discharge.

NCT ID: NCT05725382 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

Nociception Level-guided Remifentanil Dosing in Children During General Anesthesia

Start date: June 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators aim to investigate whether administration of a short-acting opioid (remifentanil) guided by a pain monitor (nociceptive level monitor) during anesthesia, can reduce pain in children after surgery. The investigators hypothesize that pain monitor-guided administration of remifentanil can reduce pain postoperatively compared with standard care.

NCT ID: NCT05700890 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

The Surgical Safety Checklist Revisited

Start date: January 27, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this study is to develop and iteratively improve a toolkit - the "High-Performance Checklist" (HPC) toolkit - that provides clinicians with evidence-informed strategies for improving their Modification, Implementation, Training on, and Evaluation of the Surgical Safety Checklist. The study team will test the toolkit in the operating rooms of Calgary's Peter Lougheed Centre and collect feedback via surveys and questionnaires. This feedback will be used to iteratively improve the toolkit. By improving clinicians' ability to modify their SSC, the study team hopes to see improvements in its uptake and surgical outcomes for patients. Participants will be surgical clinical staff members and hospital administration, as well as participants over the age of 18, who have undergone a surgery in the last 90 days. They will all complete the following tasks: Online or paper questionnaire Semi structured interviews Team meetings

NCT ID: NCT05682898 Not yet recruiting - Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trials

Perioperative Management of Colorectal Cancer Patients Infected With COVID-19: a Multicenter Prospective Cohort Study.

Start date: January 15, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This trial is a multicenter prospective cohort study to explore timing of colorectal cancer surgery after COVID-19 infection so that can assist clinicians and patients. Currently, there is less evidence on perioperative outcomes after COVID-19 vaccination and the omicron variant. Therefore, it is necessary to update previously published consensus which recommends that patients should avoid elective surgery within 7 weeks of COVID-19 infection remain, unless the benefits of doing so exceed the risk of waiting. Aiming at the above problems, we plan to carry out a multicenter prospective cohort study to develop perioperative management according patients' different conditions.

NCT ID: NCT05671484 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

TFPB vs QLB III in Infra-umbilical Pediatric Surgeries

Start date: January 5, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Regional anesthetic techniques; they reduce postoperative morbidity, provide early mobilization and provide great advantages by significantly reducing the need for narcotic analgesics. Regional anesthetic techniques are widely used in our clinic for postoperative analgesia, especially in infants and children. In patients undergoing lower abdominal surgery, postoperative analgesia is usually provided by systemic opioids and neuraxial methods. Complications such as sedation, respiratory depression, itching, nausea, vomiting and possible paraplegia or bleeding of neuraxial methods due to the use of opioids seem to be the biggest disadvantages of these two methods. Transversalis fascial plane (TFP) block is a regional anesthesia technique that provides intraoperative and postoperative analgesia as an alternative to caudal and epidural analgesia, especially in children. Transversalis fascial plane (TFP) block was first described in 2009. TFP block has been shown to be effective as an alternative to epidural analgesia and as part of a multimodal postoperative analgesic approach in lower abdominal and pelvic surgeries in children. Quadratus lumborum block (QLB) is a widely used regional anesthesia technique. It is used in pediatric patients to reduce postoperative pain in supraumbilical or infraumbilical surgeries. As a common result of all approaches, the main effect in quadratus lumborum block is anesthesia of the lateral cutaneous branches. In our center, the investigators have been using both methods, alone or in combination, routinely for a long time, and the investigators aim to compare the two methods in this study. This study consists of comparing two domain blocks known as part of multimodal analgesia.

NCT ID: NCT05635188 Completed - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

Impact of Surgical Technique on Post-operative Complications in Urgency Ostomy Confection

Start date: January 2008
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This is a single-center retrospective cohort study on cancer patients who underwent emergency ostomy. Our objective was to compare the incidence of surgical complications as well as the length of hospital stay among three different techniques for ostomy confection (laparotomy, the conventional local approach, described as trephination, and laparoscopy).

NCT ID: NCT05510141 Recruiting - Analgesia Clinical Trials

Virtual Reality Games in Pediatric Surgery

Start date: August 24, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Randomized controlled trial reporting the pain levels and pain control/reduction of children at the age of 6-15 undergoing surgical procedures by using virtual reality gaming (VR) compared to nitrous oxide. Therefore, 50 patients in each treatment group are recruited, resulting in 100 children altogether. The pain levels and pain control/reduction is measured by the standard anesthesia protocol normally used when nitrous oxide is applied and questionnaires that are administered to the patients at baseline and two weeks after surgery including both the primary and secondary outcome.

NCT ID: NCT05475041 Completed - Clinical trials for Colorectal Cancer Metastatic

Perioperative Outcomes of Simultaneous Colorectal and Liver Resections

SIMULT
Start date: June 30, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The use of a simultaneous resection in patients with synchronous colorectal liver metastases has increased over the past decades. However, it remains unclear when a simultaneous resection is beneficial and when it should be avoided. The objective of this retrospective study is therefore to compare the outcomes of a simultaneous resection for synchronous colorectal liver metastases in different settings, and to assess which factors are independently associated with unfavorable outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT05444517 Recruiting - Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trials

Interscalene Block Versus Combined Infraclavicular-Anterior Suprascapular Blocks for Shoulder Surgery

Start date: June 13, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Postoperative analgesia after shoulder surgery remains a challenge in patients with preexisting pulmonary pathology, as interscalene brachial plexus block (ISB), the standard nerve block for shoulder surgery, carries a prohibitive risk of hemidiaphragmatic paralysis (HDP). Although several diaphragm-sparing nerve blocks have been proposed, none seems to offer equivalent analgesia to ISB while avoiding HDP altogether. For instance, even costoclavicular blocks, which initially fulfilled both requirements, were subsequently found to result in a non-negligible 5%-incidence of HDP. In this randomized trial, the authors set out to compare ISB and combined infraclavicular block-anterior suprascapular nerve blocks (ICB-ASSNB) for patients undergoing arthroscopic shoulder surgery. The authors hypothesized that ICB-ASSNB would provide equivalent postoperative analgesia to ISB 30 minutes after shoulder surgery and therefore designed the current study as an equivalence trial.

NCT ID: NCT05428579 Completed - Clinical trials for Surgical Procedure, Unspecified

Status of Surgical Resection and Histologic Subtype as Predictors of Local Recurrence in Retroperitoneal Liposarcoma

Start date: October 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Soft tissue sarcomas are rare malignant tumors. Liposarcoma constitute the most frequent histological subtype of retroperitoneal sarcoma. The prognosis of soft tissue sarcomas depend on clinical and histologic characteristics. Objective: Evaluate variables that may be related to overall survival and local recurrence free survival in patients with retroperitoneal liposarcoma. Methods: retrospective analysis of medical records of 60 patients attended from 1997 to 2017, who underwent surgical resection of retroperitoneal liposarcoma.