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Conn Adenoma clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06090617 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Water and Electrolytes Content in HYpertension (WHYSKI) in the SKIn

WHYSKI
Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

WHYSKI is a prospective within-patient observational clinical study designed to test the hypothesis that alterations of Na+, K+, water, and the lympho-angiogenetic transcription factor Tonicity Enhancing Binding Protein (TonEBP) mRNA take place in the interstitium of the skin compartment of patients with arterial hypertension due to primary aldosteronism in whom hypertension can be surgically cured.

NCT ID: NCT06050057 Recruiting - Pheochromocytoma Clinical Trials

Surgical Treatment of Adrenal Diseases- Laparoscopic vs. Robotic-assisted Adrenalectomy

Start date: September 3, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The goal of this multicenter, observational, analytic, randomized clinical trial is to analyze the laparoscopic and robot-assisted method in the surgical treatment of patients with adrenal diseases. The main question it aims to answer are: 1. to find the superiority of one the the surgical method mentioned above 2. to compare the quality of life in patients with adrenal mass before surgery and after laparoscopic or robotic-assisted adrenalectomy.

NCT ID: NCT04071561 Completed - Pheochromocytoma Clinical Trials

Prevention of Conversion in Posterior Retroperitoneal Adrenalectomy by Measuring Preoperative Anatomical Conditions

Start date: November 19, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

With our retrospective study the investigators show the limitations of the posterior retroperitoneal adrenalectomy by analyzing anatomical parameters. The investigators compared the data from one patient who underwent a conversion with 13 patients without a conversion. Furthermore, they explored the influence of these parameters on the operation time and excluded the patient who had a conversion from this analysis. The investigators hypothesize that by determining anatomical characteristics on cross-sectional imaging (CT or MRI), they can show the limitations of the posterior retroperitoneal adrenalectomy to prevent patients from being converted to lateral transperitoneal adrenalectomy.