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Unilateral clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03806673 Completed - Epidural Block Clinical Trials

Is There a Relation Between Unilateral Epidural Block and Repeated Epidural Anesthesia?

Start date: February 5, 2018
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

epidural block is today the most common method of pain relief during labor. With increased use of epidural analgesia, many women are found in the second or third pregnancy and require repeated epidural analgesia. But there was a higher incidence of unilateral blockade among women receiving their repeated epidural which causes patient unsatisfaction. Objectives: Examination of the performance and outcome of women receiving their first versus repeated epidural block. Patients and methods: The study included 140 American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Physical Status II patients (age range 20 to 40 years) and scheduled for normal vaginal delivery. The patients were divided randomly into two equal groups. Group (A) in which 70 women primipara subjected to their first epidural block while group (B) in which 70 women multipara subjected to their repeated epidural block. For each patient, the following data were collected: demographic data, details of labor (gestation, cervical dilatation), visual analogue scale (VAS) before the epidural and 30 minutes after injection of local anesthetic and incidence of unilateral block.

NCT ID: NCT01026935 Completed - Inguinal Hernia Clinical Trials

The Outcome After Lichtenstein Operation vs. ProGrip Patch Repair of Inguinal Hernia

Start date: February 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

For the present study, 400 consecutive men with unilateral primary inguinal hernia are randomized to Lichtenstein repair using either light weight polypropylene mesh (38g/m2) or light weight ProGrip mesh. ProGrip mesh adheres to tissues with polylactic micro hooks without suturing. The primary aim is to examine, whether the ProGrip mesh produces less pain than sutured polypropylene mesh. Secondary outcomes are operation time and convalescence as well as recurrence rate. ProGrip mesh is supposed to be faster to apply as no sutures are needed, which may compensate for its higher cost. The patients are blinded to which mesh they receive.