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Minimally Invasive Surgery clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06391788 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Minimally Invasive Surgery

Efficacy and Safety of Thoracoscopic Morrow Surgery in the Treatment of Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy

Start date: March 31, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This single-center, prospective, open-label, randomized, controlled clinical trial is designed to assess the efficacy and safety of the Thoracoscopic Morrow procedure in the treatment of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. The primary objectives include investigating: Question 1: The efficacy and safety of two surgical modalities in patients presenting with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction and mid-left ventricular hypertrophy. Question 2: The impact of the two surgical procedures on hemodynamics in patients with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction, mid-left ventricular obstruction, and in individuals with or without organic valvular lesions. Question 3: The effects of the two surgical procedures on exercise capacity, quality of life, and long-term prognosis among patients with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction and central left ventricular obstruction, both with and without valvular lesions. Participants will be stratified into two groups. The experimental group will undergo thoracoscopic Morrow surgery, while the control group will undergo median open modified enlarged Morrow surgery.

NCT ID: NCT06202053 Recruiting - Surgical Incision Clinical Trials

An Observational Study on the Quality of Life After Precise Lung Resection Through the Periareolar Incision

Start date: September 28, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

With the rapid development of video-assisted thoracoscopic technology, minimally invasive surgery has become the mainstream surgical approach and is widely known to the public. In addition to the pursuit of successful resection, patients seek an improvement in quality of life after surgery, which poses a challenge to surgeons. The surgical quality of uniportal video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) is excellent. It has been shown to be superior to conventional VATS in many studies, especially with respect to the length of hospital stay and severity of pain/paresthesia. The rapid increase in the number of patients undergoing uniportal thoracoscopic surgery has led to the gradual widespread use of this technique. Therefore, how to further innovate this technology has become a direction of further research for surgeons. Here, we describe a rare uniportal thoracoscopic procedure through the perirareolar incision that has certain advantages over other uniportal thoracoscopic procedures.

NCT ID: NCT05971875 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Minimally Invasive Surgery

RCT on 3 Types of Hysterectomy

VANOLAH
Start date: January 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A randomized controlled trial comparing the vaginal, vNOTES ( vaginal natural orifice transluminal surgery) or laparoscopic approach for hysterectomy in women with benign gynaecological disease

NCT ID: NCT05019404 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Minimally Invasive Surgery

Minimally Invasive Surgical Epilepsy Trial for Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

MISET-TLE
Start date: April 25, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is a chronically neurological disease characterized by progressive seizures. TLE is the most frequent subtype of refractory focal epilepsy in adults. Epilepsy surgery has proven to be very efficient in TLE and superior to medical therapy in two randomized controlled trials. According to the previous experience, the investigators use functional anterior temporal lobectomy (FATL) via minicraniotomy for TLE. To date, this minimally invasive open surgery has been not reported. The investigators here present a protocol of a prospective trail which for the first time evaluates the outcomes of this new surgical therapy for TLE.

NCT ID: NCT04718272 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Minimally Invasive Surgery

Safety and Feasibility of the Application of Thoracic Puncture Tube After Pulmonary Lobectomy

Start date: January 25, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

There have been several reports on the feasibility of a no-drain policy after pneumonectomy, but the policy is not widely accepted because silent massive hemorrhage, delayed air leaks, and chylothorax would always be major worries for thoracic surgeons, and all of the researches were retrospective case studies with small sample size and insufficient evidence. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to to evaluate safety and feasibility of an improved policy, the application of a small thoracic puncture tube after pulmonary lobectomy.

NCT ID: NCT04370496 Recruiting - Cervical Cancer Clinical Trials

Safety of Minimally Invasive Surgery Using Endoscopic Stapler in Early Stage Cervical Cancer Patients (SOLUTION)

SOLUTION
Start date: July 2, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The SOLUTION trial aims to show the efficacy and safety of performing radical hysterectomy by minimally invasive surgery using an endoscopic stapler in patients with cervical cancer stage IB1 (FIGO staging 2009) and thus to prove that minimally invasive surgery is non-inferior to open surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04211948 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

Clinical Study Between Robotic and Open Surgery in Patients With Pancreatic Cancer

Start date: March 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether robotic surgery has limitations in terms of patient age, tumor size, location, and vascular relationship when compared to open surgery for pancreatic cancer. Whether robotic surgery has advantages over intraoperative bleeding, operative time, postoperative complications (bleeding, infection, pancreatic fistula) and postoperative hospital stays compared to open surgery.And the differences in lymph nodes harvest and postoperative survival between two groups.

NCT ID: NCT03427840 Recruiting - Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trials

Superior Hypogastric Plexus Blockade in Laparoscopic Hysterectomy

Start date: March 18, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The primary indication for superior hypogastric plexus (SHP) block is visceral pelvic pain, most commonly from malignancy of the ovary, uterus, cervix, bladder, rectum or prostate. Per-cutaneous SHP blocks should be done under guidance of ultrasonography, fluoroscopy, magnetic resonance or computed tomography. During minimally invasive laparoscopic surgery, percutaneous technique can be done under the guidance of cameras.

NCT ID: NCT02085031 Recruiting - Stomach Neoplasms Clinical Trials

Intracorporeal Versus Extracorporeal Roux-en-Y Esophagojejunostomy During Laparoscopic Total Gastrectomy for Gastric Cancer

Start date: April 2014
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

- To date, Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy transabdominal extracorporeally by circular stapler was the most common used method during laparoscopy-assisted total gastrectomy for gastric cancer, even though it was not totally laparoscopic surgery in which intracorporeal anastomosis should be performed. - To gain potential clinical benefits from a smaller length of minilaparotomy and an easier anastomosis technique than extracorporeal anastomosis, intracorporeal Roux-en-Y anastomosis using a transorally inserted anvil (OrVilâ„¢) during totally laparoscopic total gastrectomy was adopted by experienced surgeons recently. - However, the safety of intracorporeal Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy using a transorally inserted anvil (OrVilâ„¢) has not yet been evaluated. Thus, the study comparing the safety of intracorporeal versus extracorporeal Roux-en-Y esophagojejunostomy by circular stapler based on a well designed randomized controlled trial is needed.