View clinical trials related to Prolapse.
Filter by:This study aims to the assessment of pelvic floor symptoms and patients´ satisfaction after bilateral sacrospinous fixation for the primary treatment of pelvic organ prolapse stage IV.
This is a Canadian, multi-centre, double-blind randomized controlled trial of an innovative vaginal surgery technique for correction of pelvic organ prolapse (POP) in women. Vaginal surgery is preferred as minimally invasive, however the investigators do not know if materials such as synthetic polypropylene mesh improve success, durability and cost-effectiveness long-term. The investigators principal goal is to compare the experimental bilateral sacrospinous vaginal vault fixation with synthetic mesh arms (BSSVF-M) to the current standard of sacrospinous ligament suspension with synthetic sutures (SSLS) over a timeline of 2 years. Patients and evaluators will be blind to technique.
An increasing number of specific procedures have been described for the surgical repair of pelvic organ prolapse (POP) and concomitant stress urinary incontinence (SUI). The investigators introduced an alternative operative method for POP-Q II-III repair and anti-incontinence with the trans vaginal mesh (TVM) anterior edge fixed to the periurethral tissues at the level of mid-urethra. The efficacy and short- and long-term complication profile, of this new surgical technique as compared with those of non-modified TVM.
The purpose of this study is to identify whether a new operative technic would be acceptable in female with pelvic organ prolapse.
During surgery for pelvic organ prolapse, it is common for the surgeon to inject fluid into the vaginal tissues to help with tissue dissection. It is common that anesthetic medication is mixed into this fluid to help with pain control after surgery. Usually the pain medication injected is short-acting. In this study the investigators plan to compare the usual short-acting injected pain medication with a long-acting injected pain medication to evaluate whether this improves pain control after surgery. One type surgical procedure for prolapse will be evaluated. The procedure is sacrospinous ligament fixation. This is suspension of the vagina to treat pelvic organ prolapse. Study participants will be randomized to one of two study groups: 1. Lidocaine group (short-acting medication). 2. Liposomal bupivacaine group (long-acting medication) Information will be collected on study participants, including: demographics, procedure data, and post-operative information. The primary outcome of this study is determine if use of long-acting injected local anesthesia at the time of sacrospinous ligament fixation leads to less post-operative pain compared to short-acting local anesthesia. Secondary outcomes include: 1. post-operative opioid medication use 2. return to baseline pain status 3. post-operative time to first bowel movement 4. post-operative antiemetic use (nausea medication) 5. results of voiding trial after surgery 6. patient satisfaction with pain control
- objective: aimed to compare laparoscopic/robot-assisted hysteropexy with vaginal hysterectomy for uterine prolapse - prospective randomized clinical trial - patient 1. 60yrs or more women and 2. POP-Q stage II with symptom or POP-Q III, IV regardless of symptom - number of patient: 146 - randomize: laparoscopic/robot-assisted hysteropexy vs. hysterectomy - follow up: postoperative 1 year - primary endpoint: recurrence rate 1. recurrence of uterovaginal prolapse POP-Q stage II-IV 2. recurrence of associated symptom - secondary endpoint 1. postoperative 1 year QOL, degree of satisfaction evaluation 2. operative time, estimated blood loss 3. hospitalization period, postoperative pain, return to normal activity
The aim of the study is to perspectively compare the anatomical and functional outcomes of Pelvic Organ Prolapse (POP) repair after Laparoscopic or Robotic-assisted Colposacropexy.
To study the prevalence of bowel symptoms in patients with pelvic organ prolapse.
One thousand patients with stage>2 POP are recruited. The patients are all received surgeries,such as transvaginal synthetic mesh surgery, the sacral fixation, tissue repair surgery and colpocleisis. The patients with POP who have not undergone surgery are excluded. Postoperatively, the investigators investigate the indications and clinical efficacy of pelvic organ prolapse surgery.
Multicentre, double-armed, randomized controlled trial designed to compare mitral valve leaflet resection versus leaflet preservation with regards to the development of functional mitral stenosis following surgical repair of mitral valve prolapse. Patients will be randomized (1:1) to receive: (1) mitral valve repair with a leaflet resection or (2) mitral valve repair with leaflet preservation (using polytetrafluoroethylene neochordae), followed by echocardiographic and clinical assessment at 12-months following surgery.