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NCT ID: NCT05785559 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Assessment of Uterine Healing

Preliminary Study of Uterine Healing After Caesarean Section: CLInico-ECHOgraphic and Anatomopathologic COrrelation

COCLIECHO
Start date: April 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Caesarean section is one of the most common surgical procedures. The multiplication of uterine scars leads to an increase in complications and in particular those related to poor healing such as isthmocele or uterine rupture. The processes of uterine healing at the histological scale are little known. The main objective of the research is to analyze the process of uterine healing by means of uterine biopsies performed on the areas of cesarean section scars.

NCT ID: NCT05785546 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Neuromuscular Diseases

Elaboration of a Pronostic Score of Changes on Wheelchair's Seating System

BPIP-Score MNM
Start date: September 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Development and validation study of a prognostic score - study of prognostic performance by a prospective longitudinal multicenter cohort spread over 8 centers: 4 for the development cohort and 4 for the validation cohort).

NCT ID: NCT05784961 Not yet recruiting - Schizophrenia Clinical Trials

Impact of tDCS on Cannabis Craving in Schizophrenia

tCCS
Start date: March 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate the tDCS's impact on cannabis craving in patients with schizophrenia and cannabis addiction disorder.

NCT ID: NCT05773521 Not yet recruiting - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Peri-operative Analgesia for Single-incision Laparoscopic Appendectomy

PAMAL
Start date: August 31, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Laparoscopic appendectomy is a very common intervention in pediatric surgery. To improve outcomes, some teams have developed the use of single-site laparoscopic appendectomy (SILAP). Nevertheless, there is no consensus yet and no published data on the better perioperative analgesia, and different modalities including general intravenous analgesia, locoregional pre-operative analgesia and local analgesia can be used.

NCT ID: NCT05772663 Not yet recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

A Rehabilitation Program Based on Daily Activities in Patients With Cerebrovascular Accident

LARAQS
Start date: February 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Mixed qualitative and quantitative study, in two phases: Creation of a self-rehabilitation program based on people's daily living activities and designed with and for them. Randomized controlled study to explore whether there is a potential benefit for patients with chronic stroke to use a self-rehabilitation program.

NCT ID: NCT05772572 Not yet recruiting - Moyamoya Disease Clinical Trials

Functional Disorders Moya Moya Young Patients

TFMoya : ADAR
Start date: April 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Moya Moya disease is a rare condition of the vessels that supply blood to the brain. It normally occurs without apparent cause. In both children and adults, the disease is mainly manifested by strokes. Diagnosis is made on MRI and cerebral angiography. There is no treatment that can prevent the arteries in the brain from narrowing. Surgical treatment may be a priority, especially in the early forms of the disease. Functional, painful disorders, in particular headaches, may persist after neurosurgical intervention, without any clear predictive factor being found. Otherwise there is a disjunction between the objectification of sequelae on MRI and painful complaints, sometimes a dissociation between the improvement of the objective parameters of perfusion and imaging, and functional somatic complaints. The study focuses on improving knowledge of post-operative functional disorders in Moya Moya disease in children and adolescents, in order to propose interventions based on this knowledge and making it possible to reduce both functional complaints and depression, the anxiety which accompanies them, to decrease the impact on the quality of life and parental wandering in the installation of adapted accompaniments. For this, a half-day consultation will be intended in order to carry out questionnaires and standardized tests, the results of which will be reported and compared to known rates in the general population and the population of children with chronic diseases.

NCT ID: NCT05771909 Not yet recruiting - Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trials

Effect of App-driven Deep Breathing (NEURODIGITX) on Anxiety Levels and Quality of Life in Caregivers

DIAL_X
Start date: November 30, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The occurrence of the COVID-19 pandemic is associated with an increase in psychiatric illnesses (depression, anxiety) in the general population due to the infectious and vital risk involved, changes in social structure, particularly in the family environment, episodes of confinement, and even professional instability. These international phenomena have also been observed in France. In addition to the constraints of the general population, health care workers have been, and continue to be, subject to other forms of constraints, linked to their professional activity. Indeed, the risk of viral exposure is for them major, the confrontation with the deaths of patients because of their fragility or the weakness of the care structures, are more violent in connection with their immediate reality. In addition, the workload due to health imperatives has also led to physical and psychological exhaustion of the health care teams. In addition to the international evidence, the existence and severity of the psychological consequences for health care workers have recently been documented at the local level in a survey conducted among the staff of the Groupe hospitalier Paris Saint-Joseph (GhPSJ). In this study of more than 780 people, nearly half of whom were in charge of patients infected with SARS-CoV2, 62% reported increased anxiety since the beginning of the epidemic, 41% had symptoms of anxiety, 21% had symptoms of depression and 14% had signs of post-traumatic stress. Approximately 25% of the total population had chosen to make regular use of the "bulle" (a decompression and care platform made available to staff since the first wave within the establishment) with the aim of reducing the anxiety generated by the situation and particularly by their professional activity. Given the importance of anxiety symptoms detected in healthcare professionals during the COVID-19 pandemic, the use of a simple, brief technique, requiring neither trained personnel nor expensive or difficult-to-access devices, aimed at reducing anxious stress could be of significant benefit to the population, especially to caregivers. The objective of this study is to measure the effect of deep breathing on the anxiety of health professionals in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, and its effect on their quality of life. In order to measure the quality of the sessions, the breathing movements will be performed using a calibrated program and their immediate effectiveness will be evaluated by the variation of the heart rate, visible just after the program by the user. The NeurodigitX® system offers to control interactive 3D games on a smartphone application through breath via a sensor connected to the phone by Bluetooth. This tool also allows to measure by plethysmography the heart rate variability in a simple and non-invasive way. This system has been created as a preventive health solution by allowing everyone to measure, compare and share the activity of their Autonomic Nervous System (ANS) to better predict, understand, prevent and treat certain chronic diseases.

NCT ID: NCT05763186 Not yet recruiting - Hematology Clinical Trials

The Right Amount of Purge Useful for Blood Sampling on PiccLine (PiccLine)

PiccLine
Start date: September 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

An increasing number of patients are receiving central lines, including PiccLine systems for the administration of therapeutics and nutrition. Although these systems are not theoretically intended for blood collection, nurses prefer them as a puncture site when they are in place in their patients, saving them from further peripheral puncture in people who generally do not have optimal venous capital. It is essential to purge the tubing in place in the patient and filled with infusion solution before drawing blood. Although the dead volume of the tubing used does not exceed 2mL, the volume of purging required before filling tubes for the laboratory appears to be much greater. Anecdotal evidence suggests a useful volume of 20ml but this has never been clearly demonstrated. In addition, the Biochemistry laboratory regularly sees blood samples diluted with perfusion solution, as evidenced by biochemical assays, leading to the cancellation of analyses received in the laboratory and a new sample being taken. This increases blood spoliation for these often already anaemic patients. There is no consensus in the literature on recommendations for such sampling in PiccLine patients: - The CLSI1 (Clinical and Laboratory Standart Institute), a non-governmental organisation, issued sampling recommendations in 2017 that were taken up by Becton Dickinson2, a supplier of blood collection tubes. These recommendations include: - Rinse with 10 ml of 0.9% NaCl - Then a purge of 3 to 11 ml (depending on the analysis sought) - English-language articles3,4,5,6,7 show purge volumes ranging from 3 to 6 ml with significantly different sampling methods (rinsing or not). The investigators therefore note a discrepancy between the sampling practices of the university hospital and the recommendations of the CLSI. In fact, the investigators noted a lack of rinsing prior to purging, which could explain the difference between 20 and 3 ml. This raises the issue of protocolisation of this type of sampling in order to standardise practices. A consultation of other hospitals, carried out beforehand, enabled us to note that French practices are not in agreement with these recommendations. The management of the Rennes University Hospital as well as the Haute Autorité de Santé were contacted in order to confirm that no normative document had been published or was being drafted on this subject. The fields of study are: sampling practices on PiccLine, the pre-analytical phase in medical biology.

NCT ID: NCT05762627 Not yet recruiting - Asthma in Children Clinical Trials

Severe Eosinophilic Asthma Phenotypes During Childhood Have Various Origins

SAMP 2
Start date: March 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Study of the clinical evolution at 10 years of children from the SAMP cohort (severe asthma, eosinophilic or not, allergic or not) in order to understand the different possible evolutions of these phenotypes at different ages.

NCT ID: NCT05761015 Not yet recruiting - Chronic Pain Clinical Trials

Helping Osteoarthritis Patients to Walk With NSAID

PERIPATEI
Start date: December 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

There is a lack of effective analgesic treatments to help walking patients with painful hip/knee osteoarthritis. Our team therefore imagined a new strategy lying on a multimodal rehabilitation walking program with the help of a transient intake of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID). NSAIDs are indeed known to act specifically on pain at movement, but their continuous intake would induce unacceptable side effects. To optimize the benefit/risk balance, the molecule to be chosen must fit to the patient's profile, and its intake should cover only the period of interest, i.e. planned walks. Our multimodal rehabilitation program will also include physical techniques such as appropriate footwear, a patient's education aiming at reducing fear/avoidance and spotting side effects of NSAIDs, and a prescription frame to avoid any overdosing. This clinical study is a single-center, non-randomized, open label, one-arm trial, using drugs prescribed according to their label (i.e. osteoarthritis pain), pending a reinforced monitoring of side effects. The primary endpoint is to evaluate efficacy and tolerance of a tailored and transient administration of NSAID within a rehabilitation walking program in patients with painful hip/knee osteoarthritis. Secondary endpoints are to evaluate the adherence to the program and the factors influencing adherence; to identify the less well tolerated conditions of treatment (one condition being one molecule for one patient profile); to identify the factors of success among a set of baseline demographic, morphometric and psychometric variables; and to study the role of central sensitization (assessed by temporal summation) on the efficacy of treatment.