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Flail Chest clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00810251 Completed - Flail Chest Clinical Trials

MatrixRIB Implants for Surgical Stabilization of Flail Chest Injuries: A Registry

MatrixRIB
Start date: December 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this observational study is to document the treatment of serial rib fractures with MatrixRIB implants in a registry.

NCT ID: NCT00556543 Completed - Rib Fracture Clinical Trials

Clinical Study of the U-Plate Fracture Repair System to Treat Rib Fractures

Start date: November 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to gather information about a device used to help fix broken ribs. Hypothesis: Rib fracture repair with the U-plate system is clinically durable and safe for the indications of flail chest repair, acute pain control, chest wall defect repair, and rib fracture non-union.

NCT ID: NCT00298259 Completed - Ventilation Clinical Trials

Trial of Operative Fixation of Fractured Ribs in Patients With Flail Chest

Start date: January 2007
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Background: Fracture of several ribs in more than one place as the result of trauma, leads to paradoxical movement of the chest wall and ventilatory failure. The mainstay of management in these patients has traditionally been analgesia and positive pressure ventilation to splint the chest wall and allow healing of the ribs to begin. However, this management option leads to prolonged intensive care unit (ICU) stay with increasing complication rates as patients remain on a ventilator for prolonged periods. Patients often remain on a ventilator for two to three weeks while waiting for enough rib healing to provide sufficient chest wall stability to allow the patient to take over all their breathing themselves. Until that time, patients are at risk of pneumonia and sepsis and other complications. Long term disabilities which have been reported in these patients include ongoing pain syndromes, inability to return to work, particularly manual type labour and cosmetic chest wall deformities. An alternative treatment strategy is to operatively fix the ribs. By fixing the ribs operatively, the patient no longer requires internal pneumatic stabilization (provided by mechanical ventilation) and can be weaned from the ventilator within days rather than weeks. This can potentially lead to earlier discharge from the intensive care unit, and an avoidance of the multiple complications which arise in the ventilated patient. Rib fixation may also lead to less pain and deformity, improved mobility in the post injury phase and earlier return to work. Hypothesis: that early operative fixation of ribs in patients presenting with flail chest secondary to trauma will result in less mechanical ventilatory requirements, earlier discharge from the intensive care unit and lower rate of complications associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation. This will lead to cost savings in the treatment of these patients.