View clinical trials related to Constriction, Pathologic.
Filter by:This is a clinical evaluation to assess the effectiveness of cryospray therapy used in addition to current standard of care endoscopic therapies in preventing short term recurrent airway stenosis with a multicentric outcome evaluation. The investigators hypothesize that the addition of SCT to standard endoscopic treatment of benign airway stenosis will result in decreased stenosis recurrence at 6 months as estimated by quantitative radiologic assessment of the stenotic volume.
This retrospective studed included patients referred to our institution between December 2013 and december 2021 for septoplasty or septorhinoplasty. All patients underwent pre operatory paranasal sinus CT scan and olfactory test. Olfacory cleft stenosis will be quoted as none (less than 1/3 contact between nasal septum and ethmoïd turbinates), partial (1/3-2/3 contact between nasal septum and turbinates) or total (more than 2/3 contact between nasal septum and turbinates), as well as Olfactory Cleft obstruction as none (opacification less than 1/3 of olfactory cleft), partial (1/3-2/3 opacification) or complete (more than 2/3 opacification).
The primary goal of the trial is to investigate whether the lipid lowering strategy using Alirocumab plus statin could cause more changes from baseline in intracranial atherosclerotic plaque and hemodynamic features during 6 months of follow-up, in patients with asymptomatic intracranial artery stenosis.
It is seen that patients with Lumbar Spinal Stenosis often experience balance problems. Although the relationship between muscle thickness and balance has been explained, there are insufficient studies investigating the relationship between balance problems and muscle thickness in patients with LSS. In addition, no study has been found comparing the difference in muscle thickness and cross-sectional area in LSS patients with poor and normal balance. In addition, in LSS, pain, disability and fear of falling in balance disorders are nor clear. The aim of our study is to examine the relationship between balance and biopsychosocial factors that can affect it.
Lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) is one of the most common degenerative diseases of the spinal column, with symptoms including low back pain which worsens with ambulation, poor balance, decreased activity due to pain, and a marked decrease in quality of life (QoL). Prevalence rises with age, and current treatment options range from varied conservative management strategies, to surgical intervention with decompression of neural structures. While the effects of surgical decompression on back pain and QoL has been widely researched, the effects of surgery on patient balance is less well understood. Though patients generally have subjective improvements in this parameter after surgery, objective measurements in this patient group have been lacking. This study aims to investigate the effects of decompressive surgery on postural balance in elderly patients with LSS. Measurements of postural balance will be taken before and after decompressive surgery, as well as with regular intervals during a two-year follow-up period. A better understanding of the effect that LSS has on balance may lead to more patients being able to receive surgical treatment, which is hypothesized to lead to an increase in QoL and less perceived disability amongst this patient group.
From adulthood onwards, the aging process manifests itself in the spine through loss of disc height and kyphotic deformity. As the general population ages, the prevalence of lumbar degenerative diseases and sagittal imbalance increases. Sagittal balance is a physiological alignment resulting from the effective muscular and ligamentary forces that place patients' heads harmoniously in line with their pelvis. Roussouly first classified this alignment by differentiating four types of balance in an asymptomatic population. He established a link between the varieties of sagittal balance of the spine, the sacral slope and the position of the pelvis in space. He went on to explain sagittal imbalance in the aging population suffering from degenerative diseases. One of the most common lumbar degenerative diseases is lumbar spinal canal stenosis. Stenosis of the lumbar spinal canal is frequently associated with sagittal imbalance of the spine. Lumbar canal stenosis causes lumbar pain, leg pain, neurogenic intermittent claudication and bladder and rectal disorders. The severity of clinical symptoms increases linearly with progressive sagittal imbalance [8]. We represent the sagittal imbalance of the spine by a positive sagittal vertical axis (SVA) presented by patients to reduce the pressure exerted by the yellow ligament, which is hypertrophied in degenerative disease . Many have shown that this forward-flexing posture can be improved by simple decompression, and that this deformity corresponds to an analgesic position and not to a structural deformity. Little is known about the factors that influence alignment after lumbar canal decompression and short segment fusion. This study therefore aims to elucidate some of the clinical and radiological factors likely to affect postoperative sagittal balance in patients undergoing simple minimally invasive decompression surgery and short segment fusion (1 or 2 levels).
To detect short-term impacts of successful balloon mitral valvuloplasty on right ventricular function
The concomitant presence of cardiac amyloidosis (CA) in patients with aortic stenosis (AS) may challenge the estimation of stenosis degree. In patients with dual pathology (AS + CA) the most frequent AS hemodynamic profile is paradoxical low-flow, low-gradient AS. In this setting, estimating stenosis degree with cardiac ultrasound may be challenging and aortic valve calcium score estimation by cardiac CT is a valuable exam. Preliminary findings from small case series showed that patients with severe AS and CA presented less valvular calcium deposition compared to patients with severe AS alone. On this basis, confirmation of these findings would have a huge clinical impact on diagnosis, choice of treatment strategy and understanding of the pathophysiology of these patients. The aim of the study is to study the correlation between valvular calcium score (assessed by EKG-gated CT) and effective orifice area (assessed through echocardiogram) according to cardiac amyloidosis presence (in the overall population and among hemodynamic phenotypes of cardiac amyloidosis). As secondary endpoints the study will sought to assess TAVI/SAVR efficacy, procedural complications, in-hospital mortality, all-cause death and heart failure hospitalization at 1 year, according to absence or presence of CA.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to To assess the effectiveness of intermittent bladder catheterization (IBC) in reducing the recurrence of urethral stricture among females in tertiary care hospital, Lahore. All the patient who have undergone urethral dilation by urologist will be divided into two groups i.e. intervention group and control group. In control group already diagnosed cases of urethral stenosis who have undergone urethral dilatation will be followed fortnightly for AUA symptoms scoring for urinary complaints and urethral catheterization with nelton 14 Fr to exclude urethral stricture recurrence. In intervention group, researcher will explain the patient about the intermittent catheterization technique and give the practical demonstration for better patient understanding and make correction in patient's technique of intermittent bladder catheterization. Patient will be followed from the day of recruitment in the study after every 02 weeks by the researcher for 2 successive months. In every follow up session, assessment of the urinary complaints via AUA scoring, review of patient's technique of urethral catheterization in intervention group, and each patient's adherence to the intermittent bladder catheterization (IBC) will be noted.
Management of a "difficult airway" remains one of the most relevant and challenging tasks for anesthesiologists and pulmonary physicians. Tracheal stenosis is not common but serious complication of prolonged intubation and tracheostomy patients. The incidence of stenosis is very low if intubation lasts less than a week and patients may be asymptomatic for a long time. On presentation, tracheal stenosis may be mistaken for asthma with dyspnea and stridor. The choice of treatment depends on the site, grade, and length of stenosis, as well as on patient comorbidities, history of previous interventions, and the expertise of the surgical team. In this case report the investigators wanted to present a case of a 25-year-old female with post-intubation tracheal stenosis who was intubated for the management of severe preeclampsia.