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Polyradiculopathy clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05190718 Recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Register Study: Implementation of Pharyngeal Electrostimulation Therapy for the Treatment of Acute Neurogenic Dysphagia

R:IphEst
Start date: December 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Neurogenic dysphagia occurs with disruption of neurological systems or processes involved in the execution of coordinated and safe swallowing. It is common in patients with neurological diseases, in particular in patients treated in Intensive Care Units (ICU) who are intubated (up to 62%) and / or tracheotomised (up to 83%). Dysphagia is one of the most common and most dangerous symptoms of many neurological diseases. In addition, neurogenic dysphagia can have a significant impact on quality of life, medication efficacy, and malnutrition. Dysphagia is currently treated conservatively on evidence-based exercises, individually adapted to each patient. In the recent years pharyngeal electrostimulation has been established and shown a positive impact on outcome. In fact, this type of therapy has not only become an addition to the existing therapy, but an important alternative for patients difficult to treat by other means. The Phagenyx® is a medical device, which has lately been used more frequently in multiple hospitals for treatment of neurogenic dysphagia. For nearly two decades pharyngeal electrostimulation has been further developed and optimised. This therapy initiates changes in the swallowing motor cortex through neuroplasticity as well as local changes in peripheral sensory architecture associated with swallowing. Bath and colleagues (2020) recently reported the efficacy of pharyngeal electrostimulation (Phagenyx®) in various neurological conditions. As a result, of current published studies, the use of pharyngeal electrostimulation probe, in selected patients, with neurological diseases with moderate to severe neurogenic dysphagia will be evaluated. This trial will initially start as quality assurance project with the aim to extent it into a monocentric based register study. The Investigators aim to validate the effectiveness of pharyngeal electrostimulation for the treatment of moderate to severe neurogenic dysphagia by systematically recording specific dysphagia-relevant parameters. At present, it is still uncertain to what extent patients with neurogenic dysphagia in the context of a non-acute neurological disease could benefit from this method. The research questions: Does the use of the pharyngeal electrostimulation probe have an influence on the outcome of dysphagia in patients with moderate to severe neurogenic dysphagia? How long after therapy, can the use of the pharyngeal electrostimulation probe lead to oral food intake and/or removal of a tracheal cannula?

NCT ID: NCT02806167 Withdrawn - Polyradiculopathy Clinical Trials

Post-void Bladder Scanning in Acute Cauda Equina Syndrome

Start date: September 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Expedient diagnosis and management of acute cauda equina syndrome (CES) is essential to prevent long-term neurological sequelae for these patients. The clinical diagnosis of CES is confirmed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). However the clinical features of CES (secondary to bladder and bowel sphincter dysfunction) are variable and are common presenting features of other pathologies of the bladder and bowel, therefore most patients who undergo MRI for suspected CES have no compressive lesion evident on the MRI, excluding the diagnosis of CES. Urgent MRI scanning performed out of hours is therefore often unnecessary, however, the morbidity to the patient due to a delay in diagnosis is so significant that urgent MRI scanning is the current gold standard and duty of care in all cases of suspected CES. More objective methods of assessing patients with suspected acute CES could allow rationing of out of hours MRI scanning and reduce inappropriate admission without impacting patient safety. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a clinical algorithm which utilises digital rectal examination and ultrasound bladder scanning to stratify patients into high and low risk groups. Patients considered high risk will be admitted and sent for urgent MRI, whereas low risk patients will be discharged and undergo MRI scan within 5 days of presentation.

NCT ID: NCT02494505 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculopathy

Interest of Mycophenolate for CIDP Weaning

MYCOPID
Start date: November 18, 2013
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The main objective is to study if the mycophenolate could decrease the proportion of patients who relapse during the IVIG tapering period and after the IVIG withdrawal.

NCT ID: NCT01784328 Completed - Clinical trials for Cauda Equina Syndrome

Peristeen Bowel Irrigation System in Cauda Equina

Start date: March 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To compare the Peristeen Anal Irrigation System with conservative bowel management in a prospective study among spinal cord injured patients with lower motor neuron neurogenic bowel dysfunction.