View clinical trials related to Abortion, Second Trimester.
Filter by:To compare between the effects of misoprostol with hyoscine N-butyl bromide and misoprostol alone on shortening the time of abortion induction in the second trimester.
In France, the recently adopted law relating to the legal time limit for access to voluntary interruption of pregnancy has set a threshold of the term at which it can be performed up to 16 weeks of gestation. This single-centre study conduced at the Nancy Maternity Hospital is based on a retrospective cohort of all patients who underwent a medical termination of pregnancy between January 2010 and October 2021. The main objective is to evaluate the complications according to the term of the termination of pregnancy between two groups : [12-14] vs [14-16] weeks of gestation. The secondary objective is the distribution of these complications between the two groups. Pregnancy termination can be performed in two methods, either by medical method with mifepristone and misoprostol, or by surgical method by dilation and evacuation. Complications identified are haemorrhage, infection, retained product of trophoblast, uterine rupture and abortion induction failure. The hypothesis is the concomitant increase in complications with the term of the termination of pregnancy.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a Foley balloon is similar to osmotic dilators for preparing the cervix prior to a second trimester abortion. Procedure time will be used to compare the two different methods of cervical preparation, reflecting the ease at which the surgeon can perform through a prepared cervix. The aim is to expand effective options for cervical preparation that will can accommodate for varying patient characteristics and provider experiences.
Venous thromboembolism (VTE - blood clots that form in deep veins or in the lungs) has been identified as a leading cause of death in economically developed countries for pregnant and recently-pregnant women. There is evidence that clotting parameters can take up to 6 weeks to return to normal for women who have had term deliveries, however there is an absence of information on time taken for clotting parameters to normalise following abortion. As such, existing guidelines are based solely on expert opinion and recommend durations of VTE prevention from as short as 7 days, up to 6 weeks following abortion. All women are assessed for risk of VTE, but data are needed to inform an evidence-based approach to prevention of VTE in these women. The findings from this pilot study have the potential to inform clinical guidance and possibly a larger study subsequently.
The purpose of this study is to compare maximum pain scores between patients seeking induced abortion and requiring cervical preparation with osmotic dilators. Patients will be randomized to receive prescription for ibuprofen alone or to receive prescription for ibuprofen + oxycodone for overnight pain management after cervical preparation with osmotic dilators. Data collected in-person and through a text-messaging platform.
To evaluate the performance of uterocervical angle (UCA) in the prediction of second trimester terminations.
This study aims to compare mifepristone and buccal misoprostol to mifepristone and vaginal misoprostol for cervical preparation for second trimester dilation and evacuation (D&E).
Induction termination of pregnancy (second trimester abortion) has a median time of 14 hours from the start of medication (misoprostol) to expulsion of the fetus. The objective of this study is to evaluate a method of 'priming' on the length of induction termination of pregnancy. "Priming" refers to the use of medication to ready the cervix and uterus so that the uterus is more sensitive to medication and contracts more effectively, and also refers to softening of the cervix so that there is less resistance to dilation. Priming is used extensively before induction of labor for term pregnancy and is also used extensively before surgical abortion in second trimester. We would like to add priming the evening before induction to the usual treatment and evaluate whether the length of the induction process is shortened. Women are admitted to the hospital in the morning to start misoprostol medication, and unless expulsion occurs within 8-10 hours, need to stay overnight. The study design is to give the priming dose 12 hours before admission. The outcome of interest is the induction time from the first dose on misoprostol in the hospital to expulsion of the fetus. This study aims to assess whether the use of misoprostol as a priming agent would be beneficial with women who undergo induction termination of pregnancy.
Mid-second trimester medical terminations of pregnancy require admission to the hospital for the length of time it takes a woman to abort. The current protocol at BMC uses intra-amniotic digoxin injection the day prior to admission. The following day, the woman is admitted and given sequential doses of misoprostol until delivery occurs. The average length of time between the first dose of misoprostol and delivery is 12 hours, requiring most women to stay overnight. This is a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded study designed to determine whether adding mifepristone significantly reduces the induction interval time (time between starting the first misoprostol and delivery) required for a second trimester termination.