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Degenerative Disc Disease Lumbar clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Degenerative Disc Disease Lumbar.

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NCT ID: NCT03928041 Completed - Clinical trials for Spondylolisthesis, Grade 1

A Clinical Study to Evaluate Safety and Performance of PEEK-OPTIMA™ HA Enhanced Interbody Cages in the Lumbar Spine

Start date: June 27, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this trial is to collect clinical outcomes including radiographic and CT outcomes in patients who undergo interbody spinal fusion using the EVOS Lumbar Interbody System.

NCT ID: NCT02882243 Completed - Clinical trials for Degenerative Disc Disease Lumbar

FLXfit Post Market Outcome Study Protocol

TLIF
Start date: July 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This investigation will provide safety and effectiveness information on the use of the FLXfit™ Cage. Data will be used for Post Market follow-up of the FLXfit™ system by evaluating: - Safety as measured by the rate of serious operative and post-operative complications. - Patients' quality of life, measured by health-related quality of life questionnaires up to 24 months following the procedure, as compared to patient's baseline.

NCT ID: NCT01861743 Terminated - Spinal Stenosis Clinical Trials

Multimodal Analgesia Versus Routine Care Pain Management

MMA
Start date: April 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Most patients undergoing surgery experience significant post-operative pain. Inadequate peri-operative pain management may decrease post-operative mobilization and increase length of hospitalization. Additionally, poorly managed acute post-operative pain analgesia is associated with an increased risk of developing chronic pain and delayed wound healing. Lumbar spine surgery is particularly painful, often requiring a multi-day hospitalization. The most common post-operative analgesia used in spine surgery is narcotic medication delivered via an intravenous patient controlled analgesia (IV PCA). A multimodal peri-operative pain management protocol for spine surgery has the potential to not only decrease pain but also to improve recovery, decrease narcotic consumption, decrease length of stay in the hospital and reduce both direct and indirect hospital costs. The purpose of this study is to determine if post-operative pain and rate of recovery are improved in patients undergoing spine surgery using MMA compared to usual analgesic care.