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Heterotopic Ossification clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04867018 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Heterotopic Ossification

Defining the Pathophysiology of Heterotopic Ossification: A Prospective Study

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Our overarching aim is to define the pathophysiology, epidemiology, and natural history of HO by following patients from date of injury until full wound healing has occurred and the window for HO has passed. Specific aims Aim 1: To classify the acute and chronic physiologic profiles of fracture patients and how they relate to the development of HO. Here the investigators will look at the systemic derangements to patients' coagulation, fibrinolytic, and inflammatory profiles. Aim 2: Identify the true incidence and time course of HO development after traumatic fracture. To accomplish this the investigators will look at patients who have sustained hip fracture, midshaft/distal femur fracture, humerus fracture, proximal radius fracture, and elbow dislocation/fractures and track follow-up images up to one year after injury looking for HO. Aim 3: Define the histologic characteristics of HO development. To accomplish this aim the investigators will perform a histologic analysis on a sample of injured muscle surrounding the fracture area. Aim 4: To determine what comorbid, iatrogenic, or environmental influences are associated with the formation of HO. To achieve this aim the investigators will evaluate data including injury type, surgery type, operative duration, surgical approach, contamination (open vs closed injury), complications (malunion, nonunion, infection, hardware failure, removal of hardware), hardware type, comorbidities (smoking, cardiac history, diabetes), and medications.

NCT ID: NCT00586365 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Heterotopic Ossification

Naproxen for the Prevention of HO After Complex Elbow Trauma

Naproxen
Start date: October 2007
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Complex elbow fractures can lead to formation of new bone (called Heterotopic ossification). This new bone is unwanted and it can restrict motion. This research study is being done to learn more about the effect of the drug naproxen, on unwanted formation of new bone around the elbow as it heals after a fracture. Naproxen belongs to a class of drugs called NSAIDs which stands for non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Several research studies suggest that NSAIDs such as Naproxen can prevent the unwanted formation of new bone around the hip. The effect of NSAIDS on the formation of bone around the elbow has not been studied as well as it has been studied for their effect on the hip. The drug, Naproxen is approved by the US food and drug administration (FDA) for sale but ot specifically for the treatment of heterotopic ossification.

NCT ID: NCT00262392 Withdrawn - Clinical trials for Heterotopic Ossification

Study of Pamidronate for the Prevention of Heterotopic Ossification

Start date: June 2005
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether Bisphosphonates in comparison to radiation therapy are effective in the prophylaxis and treatment of heterotopic ossification in high risk patients.