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Hernia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT00968773 Active, not recruiting - Inguinal Hernia Clinical Trials

Rebound Hernia Repair Device Mesh Trial

Start date: September 2009
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a post-market study of the Rebound Hernia Repair Device to further establish the safety, efficacy, and utility of the Rebound Hernia Repair Device in a controlled population. The Rebound Hernia Repair Device will be used for its approved indication in comparison to "standard" hernia mesh. Two-way students t-tests, Chi squared analysis and ANOVA will be used to detect differences in variables. The study is sufficiently powered to detect a 25% difference. The study data will include quality of life assessments, visual analogue scale , SF-36, Carolinas Comfort Scale), recurrence of hernia (technical failure), use of medications (pain) and complications/adverse events.

NCT ID: NCT00786084 Active, not recruiting - Hiatal Hernia Clinical Trials

Study of Paraesophageal Hernia Repair With Small Intestine Submucosa

PEH
Start date: September 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

In 2006 this research group reported their initial findings of a multi-center prospective trial comparing primary repair and primary repair buttressed with a biologic mesh made from porcine small intestinal submucosa (SIS). We were able to accrue 108 patients from 7/2002-3/2005 and followed each patient over 6 months and performed an UGI to check the durability of the repair and rule out a recurrence. The results suggested a significant benefit for the use of SIS mesh in the short-term, with the primary group having a 26% recurrence rate and the mesh group a 9% recurrence rate. While these results are encouraging, it is important to know what is the durability and the longer term benefits of the use of SIS mesh. For this reason we propose a follow-up of the original study patients with the same outcome measures (symptom questionnaire, SF-36, and UGI). This should give us a very good idea about the long-term success of laparoscopic PEH repair with primary and SIS mesh.

NCT ID: NCT00451893 Active, not recruiting - Inguinal Hernia Clinical Trials

The Significance of the Mesh Thickness in the Operation of Inguinal Hernia

LJUNO
Start date: December 2006
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The trial compares the postoperative complain, pain, quality of life after the implantation of a heavy-weight alternative light-weight mesh, by randomly allocating patients with inguinal hernia disease to two groups of surgeons, each group being trained to operate with one of the above mentioned meshes. Hypothesis: There is less postoperative pain after the implantation of a light-weight mesh.