View clinical trials related to Congenital Abnormalities.
Filter by:This is a single-center, prospective, single-arm clinical study to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and performance of VenoStent's SelfWrap® Bioabsorbable Perivascular Wrap on arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs). All participants are chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients already receiving hemodialysis treatments that are referred for creation of a new arteriovenous fistula (AVF).
Hemodynamics in the craniovertebral zone is often disturbed under the influence of a spondylogenic factor A complication of such changes can be from a slight decrease in cerebral circulation to ischemic changes in the vascular bed The patients underwent complex radiation diagnostics of the craniovertebral region of patients with verified Kimmerle's anomaly (N = 62) All examined patients underwent multispiral computed tomography (CT), ultrasound Doppler and transcranial Doppler (TCD) of the vertebral arteries (VA) Studies of the developmental variant of the first cervical vertebra with the presence of a bony bridge have shown that Kimmerle's anomaly can occur in all age groups
This is a two-part, multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to investigate the safety, efficacy and pharmacokinetics of REC-994 (200 mg and 400 mg) compared to placebo in subjects with symptomatic cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM).
A retrospective, single-tertiary centre observational study. The study population consists mainly of patients with instrumented posterolateral spine fusion operated at the Department of Neurosurgery or at the Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology in the Turku University Hospital. Also, patients with non-instrumented posterolateral spine fusion, interbody spine fusion, and a combination of posterolateral and interbody spine fusion are included. The approximate number of the above-mentioned operations with BonAlive® putty is 400 - 500 between September 2013 and April 2021. In the operations, the BonAlive® putty was used either alone, together with autologous bone (AB) chips, with milled allogenous bone chips, with demineralized bone matrix (DBM), with other synthetic bone grafts, or with a combination of the above-mentioned.
This study aims to develop a new instrument capable of providing an efficient measure of the quality of life of parents of conservatively treated patients with spinal deformity. The development of a questionnaire in a Rasch environment and specifically developed for parents of conservatively treated patients will ensure greater sensitivity and specificity of the questionnaire.
Chest computed tomography of patients having coronavirus disease (COVID-19) will be analyzed with regards to vascular abnormalities (pulmonary embolism and vascular thickening), and their association with lung inflammation. The prevalence, severity, distribution, and prognostic value of chest CT findings will be assessed. Patients with vascular abnormalities will be compared to patients without, which is supposed to provide insights into the prognostic role of such abnormalities, and the potential impact on treatment strategy.
The main objectives of this study are to evaluate overall clinical performance and safety of the Persona Ti-Nidium implant in total knee arthroplasty.
A good understanding of the principles of balance is vital to achieve optimal outcomes when treating spinal disorders. A complex interaction of the neuromotor system and muscular recruitment is necessary for ergonomic balance and deliberate displacement of the human body. Sagittal plane misalignment in spinal deformities challenges balance mechanisms used for maintenance of an upright posture. The occurrence of postoperative complications after spinal deformity correction like under-correction of sagittal misalignment, postoperative reciprocal changes in thoracic kyphosis, proximal junctional kyphosis and failure of instrumentation are possibly due to the current state-of-the art inadequate diagnostic work-up. Investigators do not fully understand the roll of vision and exact strategy of recruitment of neuromuscular units (trunk, pelvis, lower limbs) in patients with sagittal plane misalignment during standing and walking. To understand this, a dynamic evaluation of individuals with spinal deformities is needed. Currently there is only very little research performed in the field of clinical balance tests and instrumented movement analysis in patients with spinal deformity. The challenge for future studies is to further unravel the relation between trunk and lower limb movements, grouped into functional movement patterns. Moreover, additional information on trunk and lower limb kinetics and muscle activity (using dynamic electromyography (EMG)) will highly contribute to the understanding of this functional relationship, and will provide more in-depth insights into compensatory mechanisms of the trunk versus the lower limbs and vice versa.
Beyond EV-B, there are clinical observations to implicate other viruses in birth defects, including CHD. Since the Rubella epidemic of 1960s', however, viruses have received little attention and certainly no comprehensive study, especially using next generation sequencing (NGS), has been undertaken in this context. The current pandemic as well as those caused by Zika, influenza, Ebola and Lassa Fever (among many) have shown pregnant women and their baby are at high risk. Therefore, an open-minded approach is warranted when considering the role of maternal viral infections in CHD. Even less is known about maternal immune response, such as antibody production, to these viruses. The investigator's goal is to answer the above gaps in knowledge. The investigators propose to do that using two different approaches; one retrospective (analysis of samples in two existing, large biorepositories) and the other prospective. The investigator's have created a multi-disciplinary team to bring together the needed expertise from individuals who have overlapping and vested interest in this project. The investigator's specific aim is to examine the diversity of the gut virome in non-pregnant and pregnant women with and without diabetes, with special emphasis on known cardiotropic viruses (those with tropism for cardiac tissues). This study is seen by the investigator's as the first step prior to a larger prospective multi-institutional study to specifically assess the linkage between the maternal virome and CHD pathogenesis.
Ultrasound scans during first trimester are more difficult than routine mid-trimester ultrasound scans. Practice guidelines for first trimester fetal ultrasound scans have been provided by the International Society of Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology (ISUOG) since 2013. Using this guidelines, different levels of proficiency operators might have equal ability to complete first trimester ultrasound scans.