View clinical trials related to Urological Disease.
Filter by:Over 30 million surgeries are performed annually in the US. Up to 30% of surgical patients experience delayed surgical recovery, marked by prolonged post-surgical pain, opioid consumption, and functional impairment, which contributes $8 billion annually to US health care costs. Novel interventions that improve the resolution of pain, minimize opioid exposure, and accelerate functional recovery after surgery are urgently needed. Multi-modal pre-operative optimization programs (or "prehab") integrating exercise, nutrition, and stress reduction have been shown to safely and effectively improve outcomes after surgery. However, no objective biological markers assess prehab effectiveness and are able to tailor prehab programs to individual patients. Surgery is a profound immunological perturbation, during which a complex network of innate and adaptive immune cells is mobilized to organize the recovery process of wound healing, tissue repair, and pain resolution. As such, the in-depth assessment of a patient's immune system before surgery is a promising approach to tailor prehab programs to modifiable biological markers associated with surgical recovery. The primary goal of this clinical trial is to determine the effect of a personalized prehab program on patients immunological status before surgery.
Significant differences exist among various dermatome maps. In addition, there were no anatomical landmarks to evaluate the dermatome at the back. The investigators aim to map the sensory innervations of lower thoracic nerves and find the dorsal landmarks to evaluate sensory innervations by epidural block. Patients undergoing urological surgery will receive epidural block. Fifty patients with superior border of complete sensory loss to ice from T9 to T12 (anterior median line) will be included in this study. The sensory loss to ice will be evaluated at midclavicular line, anterior axillary line, posterior axillary line, scapular line and posterior median line. The level of vertebrae will be identified and marked by ultrasound. The superior border of complete sensory loss to ice from anterior median line to posterior median line will be recorded for every patient. The dermatome map of T9 to T12 will be drawn. The landmarks of sensory innervations at posterior median line will be established using vertebrae.
Propofol can be measured continuously in breath gas during anesthesia. This study compares propofol concentration in plasma and breath gas and processed electroencephalographic monitoring (bispectral index) under clinical conditions with patients and total intravenous anesthesia. Target controlled infusion technique is used to deliver adequate propofol concentration in plasma.