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Drain Site Complication clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04656145 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Drain Site Complication

The Efficacy of Chlorhexidine Gluconate Gel Dressing in Preventing Surgical Drain Site Infection

Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to evaluate if the application of chlorhexidine gluconate dressing on surgical drain sites can decrease drain site infection vs the standard of care (dry, sterile gauze).

NCT ID: NCT03971760 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Head and Neck Neoplasms

Ideal Drainage Output of Post-operative Neck Suction Drain

Start date: November 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A precautionary measure that is frequently used after a neck surgery is the usage of suction drains, which allow the evacuation or air and fluids accumulated at the site of the surgery using negative pressure. Theoretically this helps promote better healing of the wound. Usage of suction drains, however, requires keeping some patients hospitalized after surgery for drain surveillance while they could have otherwise been discharged to safely begin their convalescence at home. In other cases, patient hospitalisation can be prolonged by the usage of suction drains, because surgeons wait for the output of the drain to fall below a certain quantity before removing them. This of course results in additional costs to the health system. The quantity below which the drain output should fall before drain removal is however not something agreed upon in the medical literature and is generally based on a surgeon's personal experience or that of the institution in which they practice. It would be important to better define this value, since prolonged usage of suction drains is not risk-free. Indeed, they constitute, among other things, an access for bacteria to cause an infection to develop inside the neck, which compromises wound healing and may result in more pronounced scarring. This study aims to compare a frequently used output value (30 mL per 24 hours) with a more permissive one of 50 mL per 24 hours. The investigators will look more specifically at wound complications, length of hospitalisation and cost-effectiveness for the health system. This study will recruit patients undergoing neck surgery at the Centre Hospitalier de l'Université de Montréal to compare both of these suction drain output values.