View clinical trials related to Uterine Hemorrhage.
Filter by:The purpose of the study is to investigate if the study drugs (tranexamic acid or mefenamic acid) can control irregular bleeding during the first 3 months of using Mirena. The study drugs tested are tested against placebo ("dummy medication not containing any active drug"). Treatment period is followed by a one-month period when study drugs are not taken but Mirena use is continued.
This study aims to test the effect of Doxycycline in treatment of uterine bleeding during the use of injectable contraception that contains one hormone "progesterone only".
Endometrial ablation in women with dysfunctional uterine bleeding using second generation ablation devices is a common widespread therapeutic approach. This study aims to prove that amenorrhoea rates using Novasure are higher than those observed in microwave endometrial ablation, one year following intervention.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effectiveness and acceptability of high dose MPA (20mg oral 3 times a day) for 3 days combined with an injection of DMPA 150 mg intramuscularly in the treatment of acute heavy, prolonged uterine bleeding who have been identified as being eligible for outpatient management
This study is conducted in Europe. The primary aim of this observational study is to investigate the occurrence of bleeding in women taking 0.5 mg estradiol and 0.1 mg norethisterone acetate (NETA) for 12 months.
This study assesses the effectiveness of intrauterine fibroid and polyp removal using the Interlace Medical 1st generation hysteroscopic morcellator device based on a retrospective review of medical records of women who have been treated with the device.
This is a phase 2, randomized, active-controlled, parallel-group, multicenter, single-blind trial of three different doses of etonogestrel releasing medicated intrauterine systems (ENG-MIUS) in healthy parous women in need for contraception. The primary trial objective is to explore safety and acceptability of three doses of an ENG-releasing medicated intrauterine system (ENG-MIUS) as compared to Multiload-cu 375®.
The investigators have developed a novel instrument for taking endometrial biopsies at no touch (vaginoscopic) hysterectomy which avoids the need to instrument the vagina with speculums and tenaculums, and also avoids the possible need for cervical dilatation. The investigators wish to study the ease of use and efficacy of the new device compared with traditional techniques of endometrial sampling at hysteroscopy.
The role of teleradiology has far reaching implications for the health of remote and underserved populations. The ability to coordinate radiographic evaluation and diagnosis from a distance has the potential to raise the standard of patient care throughout the world. Perhaps the safest and most cost effective mode of teleradiology today is telesonography. The current project attempts to determine the extent that telesonography improves the standard of care within a rural government-run primary clinic within the Dominican Republic. The work reported herein is intended to compare the use of telesonography to the current standard of sonographic examination (referral to government hospital 60km from target clinic). The study was conducted by randomly assigning 100 patients with clinical indications for sonographic examination into experimental and control groups. Following a 60-day implementation period, the following research questions will be addressed: 1) To what extent does the use of asynchronous telesonography increase the percentage of definitive diagnoses based on the total number of scans (definitive diagnoses / total number of scans)? 2) To what extent does the use of asynchronous telesonography increase the continuity of care for patients? 3) To what extent does the elapsed time between scanning and final radiological interpretation decrease with the use of asynchronous telesonography? This study will also look at the history of telemedicine / telesonography and its dissemination into the mainstream practice of medicine, explore training protocols that may be used to assist others to establish new telesonography programs in a developing nations, and discuss both advances and persistent barriers to the implementation of telesonography programs. Hypothesis: The use of a store-and-forward telesonography system in this setting will increase the speed and number of final diagnoses per scan received by the target clinic and will increase the continuity of care by increasing the number and speed of follow-up appointments to the target clinic.
The Objective of this study is to study the safety of FCM in patients with anemia caused by Heavy Uterine Bleeding and the Post Partum state.