View clinical trials related to Intervertebral Disc Degeneration.
Filter by:The purpose of this research study is to examine the effects of physical therapy on the spinal discs. Back pain is the number one cause of disability in the US, and the spine is the most common location of chronic pain in Veterans. Physical therapy is often very effective at improving patients' back pain, but it does not work for everyone, and it is not understood how physical therapy alters the tissues within the spine. With this research the investigators hope to learn if the investigative team can measure changes to the spinal discs on MRI scans that might predict if a patient's back pain will improve with physical therapy or not.
Spinal operations including lumbar fusions for degenerative disorders are becoming more prevalent as the population ages. Inadequate or excessive postoperative analgesia can result in medical comorbidities and prolonged hospital length of stay and patient dissatisfaction. Existing literature has highlighted the preoperative administration of methadone as a promising adjuvant for post operative pain control. Methadone has the benefit of being long-acting and has more stable serum concentration and a single preoperative dose may have significant benefits post operatively. Here the investigators propose a prospective parallel-group, randomized, double-blinded study to assess post operative analgesic requirements after preoperative administration of either methadone 15 mg or Oxycodone 10/325. Primary outcome will be total IV and PO narcotic consumption in the post operative course. Secondary outcomes examined will include time to mobility, need for specialist pain management consultation, early readmission (within 2 weeks) for inadequate pain control, and complications associated with administration.
A prospective, double blinded, multi-center study to assess the validity and clinical utility of the pre-operative NOCISCAN-LS software in the identification of painful lumbar discs, and the correlation with improved surgical outcomes at 3, 6, 12 and 24 months (follow-up) following spine surgery in a single enrollment arm of subjects with chronic symptomatic single level degenerative disc disease (DDD) at L3 to S1, but with two evaluation groups- Match Group and Miss Group,of subjects based on the association between the NOCISCORE results of treated and untreated disc levels.
This study is a Post Market Follow Up Study to compare the fusion rates between the NanoFUSE® Bioactive Matrix (75%) w/autograft (25%) and autogenous bone in posterolateral gutter spinal fusion.
The aim of the study is to determine the efficacy of an Amniotic Fluid Tissue Product for pain relief and functional improvements for all types of musculoskeletal conditions. The study is prospective, with outcome measures being obtained at numerous time points after the regenerative procedure.
The object of this study is to assess the long-term safety and efficacy of cervical disc replacement with the ProDisc-C vivo Cervical Disc in a prospective, randomized, multi-center trial with 7 years of follow-up.
Patients with single-level cervical degenerative disc disease commonly undertook anterior discectomy. To compare the effect of anterior cervical discectomy without fusion (ACD), anterior cervical discectomy with fusion by stand-alone cage (ACDF) or anterior cervical discectomy with arthroplasty (ACDA), a multiple center randomised controlled trial will be performed in patients with single-level cervical disease. The primary outcome will be cervical alignment by upright cervical spine radiographs estimated by Harrison posterior tangent method.
A safety and feasibility study of free-run and stimulated corporal electromyography (EMG) to assess autonomic neural function during spinal and/or pelvic surgery in women and men.
This study is a post-market clinical follow-up study. A post-market, prospective clinical trial will be conducted. The data collected from this study will serve the purpose of confirming safety and performance of the FLXfit™ implant.
This is a prospective, single-arm, open-label, non-randomized study. The aim of the study is to assess the safety and efficacy of the Prow LIF procedure in Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion (TLIF) procedures for the treatment of subjects with symptomatic degenerative disc disease (DDD).