View clinical trials related to Funnel Chest.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to test virtual reality in adolescents undergoing minimally invasive repair of pectus excavatum surgery. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Can virtual reality decrease anxiety in adolescents on the day of the surgery? - Can virtual reality be used as a pain modulator in adolescents in postoperative care? Participants will be asked to wear a VR headset for a minimum of 1 hour before and after the surgery. Patients will be asked to fill out three anxiety tests: on admission, in the operating room and on the surgical ward on the day after surgery. Researchers will compare VR group to control group to see if anxiety and pain was different among those who recieved the VR headset.
The most important problem in the postoperative period in patients scheduled for pectus deformity correction surgery is pain. Due to the catastrophic neurological complications of thoracic epidural analgesia, the tendency towards plane blocks has been increasing in recent years. Serratus Plane Block (SAP Block), performed under ultrasound guidance, is used to treat pain in thoracic surgery. However, whether it has an effect on sternum pain is still controversial and there are not enough studies. Transversus thoracic plane block (TTP Block) provides effective analgesia in sternotomies. For this reason, we aimed to show that the TTP block added to the SAP block will provide more effective analgesia in order to provide adequate analgesia for the pressure and pain sensation of the bars placed on the sternum in pectus surgery.
Pectus deformities are among the most common anterior chest wall pathologies. Pectus excavatum is the most common chest deformity with an incidence of 0.1-0.3%. In severe deformities, a decrease in lung volume is observed. This can cause decreased pulmonary function and affect the function of the right ventricle. The diaphragm is the main respiratory muscle, and diaphragm contraction is associated with respiratory functions. So, investigators aimed to measure diaphragmatic thickness in adolescents with pectus deformity and to show whether diaphragmatic thickness is an early predictor of respiratory disorder in participants who do not show any clinical symptoms or whose respiratory functions are normal.
The Fontan Procedure is a palliative surgical procedure used in pediatric patients with one functional ventricle. The procedure, a series of stepwise operations that alter cardiorespiratory physiology, separate the systemic and pulmonary circulations to create Fontan physiology, where the systemic venous blood flows passively and without ventricular thrust into the pulmonary circulation. The hallmark of the Fontan circulation is a sustained, abnormally elevated central venous pressure combined with decreased cardiac output, especially during periods of increased demands. Results of several studies in Fontan patients have shown reduced parasympathetic and sympathetic activity compared to controls. In children with congenital heart disease, a differential diagnosis of autonomic dysfunction may be part of their pathophysiology, a compensatory mechanism, a consequence of surgical procedures or a combination of these. In children, measurement of ANS function is equally important. Children with single ventricle physiology (and other cardiac conditions) have routine surveillance and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging to monitor for disease progression. While autonomic data is routinely collected and is available from these scans, these data are rarely, collected and analyzed; however, our group has shown feasibility. Therefore, autonomic data is usually unavailable in children. Despite the availability of agerelated normal values, the predictive power of autonomic activity is understudied in children and there are no published studies of quantification of autonomic data in this population.
The goal of this study is to determine the effect of Nuss minimally-invasive repair technique of pectus excavatum (PE) on the postural stability in patients with PE. The main questions it aims to answer are: - How surgical chest wall repair will affect postural stability of PE patients? - What is the difference in postural stability between patients with PE and healthy controls? Participants will undergo the Nuss repair surgery and will be tested before and afterwards for their postural stability with the use of the posturography method. Researchers will compare PE male patients and healthy young men to see if PE posture defect affects postural stability.
This study compared standard therapy (multimodal analgesia with 2 minutes cryoanalgesia) versus a novel approach (multimodal analgesia with 1 minute cryoanalgesia) in subject undergoing minimal invasive modyfied Nuss procedure with thoracoscopy.
Primary objective of the current study is to determine the impact of intercostal nerve cryoablation on postoperative length of hospital stay compared to standard pain management of young pectus excavatum patients (12-24 years) treated with the minimal invasive Nuss procedure. The study is designed as a single center, prospective, unblinded, randomized clinical trial.
The clinical study evaluates the use of a custom-made medical-grade polycaprolactone-PCL Pectus scaffold implantation with Autologous Fat Grafting for pectus excavatum camouflage (IT). The study aims to demonstrate the safety and clinical performance of the insertion of an absorbable "medical-grade polycaprolactone-PCL Pectus Scaffold" in the thorax region with Autologous Fat Grafting in the correction of congenital Pectus Excavatum unsuitable for conventional treatment with stable cardio-respiratory function. The PCL Pectus Scaffold-based design has the potential to induce sustained regeneration to fill large volume pectus excavatum defects, with the added benefit of being light weight and resorbable, thus not affecting the patients function capacity and reducing the risk of implant-related complications.
This Study study compared standard therapy (multimodal and regional analgesia) versus a novel approach (Cryoanalgesia combined with bilateral erector spine plane block and multimodal analgesia) in subjects undergoing minimal invasive modyfied Nuss procedure (thoracoscopy).
The clinical study is testing a new treatment for pectus excavatum called "custom-made 3D printed scaffold-based soft tissue reconstruction". The new method uses a combination of the patients own adipocytes (fat cells) with a 3D printed scaffold (PCL Pectus Scaffold) to support soft tissue regeneration in the patient's chest using the body's natural healing processes. The implanted scaffold acts as a resorbable frame to support the growth of cells. The substance used for the scaffold is resorbable, it's similar to the substance used for sutures and stitches, and it's already Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) approved for bone reconstruction of the skull. The implanted scaffold degrades over time, leaving the tissue in its place.