View clinical trials related to Uterine Cervical Incompetence.
Filter by:This study aimed to asses predictive factors associated with successful cervical cerclage and poor pregnancy outcomes in all indications.129 pregnant women who underwent cerclage at 12-25 weeks gestation in a perinatal medical center were included. The patients were divided into three subgroups for data analysis. Groups included patients with respectively history-indicated cerclage (group 1), ultrasound-indicated cerclage (group 2), and rescue cerclage (group 3). The investigators defined successful cerclage as postponing birth until after the 28th week of gestation and a 'good outcome' was defined as delivery beyond 34 completed weeks.Factors associated with successful cervical cerclage and perinatal outcomes after the procedure for all three groups were analyzed. The investigators also calculated post-cerclage the cervical length cut-off value required to predict if birth could be postponed until after the 28th week of gestation in women with cervical insufficiency.
Preterm birth is a leading cause of neonatal mortality and morbidity. Cervical insufficiency is one factor implicated in the complex mechanisms involved in spontaneous preterm birth. Trans-abdominal insertion of a cervical cerclage suture can be used to treat cervical insufficiency. Growing evidence support that laparoscopic cerclage procedures are safe and effective. Still, many aspects of the laparoscopic cerclage remains uncertain. Therefore, the investigators plan to study the obstetric outcome from the first and subsequent pregnancies after laparoscopic cerclage in a Danish cohort from Aarhus University Hospital in a 10 years' period.
This study compares the rate of live births before and after cervico-isthmic cerclage in 3 hospitals in the last 10 years. The hypothesis is that cerclage significantly increases the rate of live births in women with cervical insufficiency.
The goal of this cross sectional study is to evaluate the differences in cervical stiffness between patients who present for cerclage placement versus normal pregnancies. The central hypothesis is that women for whom a cerclage is indicated will have cervical stiffness measurements lower than normal controls. Cervical stiffness will be objectively measured by the closing pressure Pcl using the Pregnolia measurement device. This is performed during a speculum exam by placing the measurement probe on the ectocervix. In current clinical care, there is no objective measurement of cervical stiffness. An accurate measurement of cervical stiffness that correlates with clinical outcome will advance the field. Successful completion of the current study will spark future studies that correlate cervical stiffness pcl in a prospective study.
The medication misoprostol is used to facilitate the entry into the uterus of hysteroscopy surgery equipment and this research aims to compare the results of the use of this drug in two different doses trying to find the optimal one. To perform this work we will use the misoprostol and will perform a questionnaire that will be asked during hospitalization, before, during and the 12hours after the surgery. The patients who meet the inclusion criteria after signing the Informed Consent Form will be allocated into two groups getting misoprostol 200mcg or misoprostol 800mcg.
The purpose of the proposed study is to examine the relationship between cerclage suture material of Ethibond and Prolene and its effect on the vaginal microbiome in a prospective randomized control trial. Ethibond is another commonly used suture material for performing cervical cerclage that shares some characteristics with previously studied suture materials. It is braided like the Mersilene, but thinner like the monofilament Prolene. The investigators will study whether Ethibond causes the vaginal microbiome to be adversely affected like Mersilene or whether there is a healthy microbiome like Prolene. This study will allow the investigators to determine whether it is advisable to continue to use Ethibond for cervical cerclage in clinical practice, or whether obstetricians should avoid its use as now done with Mersilene.
This study aims to compare the effect of chloroprocaine vs. bupivacaine on duration of motor block and duration until meeting discharge criteria in patients undergoing cervical cerclage. The hypothesis is that chloroprocaine will result in faster resolution of motor block.
This study aims to determine whether or not spinal anesthesia with the local anesthetic drug, chloroprocaine, wears off faster than the local anesthetic drug, bupivacaine, and results in faster discharge from the post-anesthesia care unit after surgery.
Cervical insufficiency (CI), responsible for 8% of preterm births (PB), is used to describe painless cervical dilation leading to recurrent second-trimester pregnancy losses/births of otherwise normal pregnancies. Structural weakness of cervical tissue was thought to cause or contribute to these adverse outcomes. The term has also been applied to women with one or two such losses/births or at risk for second-trimester pregnancy loss/birth. Cervical pessary and cervical cerclage are both considered as preventive treatments in women at risk for PB. This study aims to demonstrate that the cervical pessary could reduce the preterm birth rate before 37 weeks of gestation in women with prior PB due to cervical insufficiency or in women with prior PB and a short cervix in the current pregnancy.
Non-interventional prospective data collection designed to evaluate clinical outcome on the efficacy of the use of Dilapan-S in the indication of labor pre-induction in women with/without a history of Caesarean section. The evaluation will be based on prospective data collection in at least four obstetrics centers in the Czech Republic.