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Vaginal Delivery clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02824679 Completed - Vaginal Delivery Clinical Trials

Effect of Intravenous Hyoscine Butylbromide Injection on First Stage Labour in Primigavidae

Start date: July 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

A case control study conducted on 120 women coming to Cairo University Maternity Hospital .Patients who meet the inclusion criteria were asked to participate in the study and a verbal consent was obtained from each patient. Patients will be divided into three equal groups (A, B, C). A single dose of the drug (placebo or HBB 20mg or HBB 40 mg) will be injected intravenously slowly to groups A, B, C respectively. Labouring mothers will be monitored in bed. Vaginal examination will be conducted every two hours. The duration of the first stage was calculated from the time of cervical dilatation of three to four centimeters in active labour until a fully dilated cervix will be observed

NCT ID: NCT02024256 Recruiting - Vaginal Delivery Clinical Trials

Cold Magnesium Sulfate Solution for Perineal Swelling Following Vaginal Delivery

MgSo4
Start date: January 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare the impact of treatment with cooled magnesium sulfate and cold water-soaked pads on perineal pain and swelling following vaginal delivery. Assessment of appropriateness for each patient to take part in the study will be performed approximately 2 hours following delivery. Those patients who consent to participate in the trial will be allocated to treatment groups in a double-blinded, randomized manner. Women in the study group will receive treatment with pads soaked in a cold aqueous solution of magnesium sulfate at 33% (w/v) concentration, while those in the control group will receive treatment with pads soaked in cold water. Nurses will initiate treatment according to the group to which the patient was randomized. Said pads will be given the patients routinely 5 times a day at regular times. A physician will assess the perineal swelling according to visual (photographed) scale in which severe, moderate, light and no swelling will be defined. Measurement of swelling in centimeters (maximal length and breadth); photography, by a medical photographer or the examining doctor, of the perineal area with a centimeter ruler, before, during and after treatment (photography is dependent on patient approval and is not a precondition to participation in the trial.); and additional examination, on the above basis, will be performed regarding hemorrhoids in the event that a patient has complained of such. A nurse will assess the perineal pain and swelling on a scale ranging from 0 to 10 prior to the patient being given the pad and an hour following treatment. An additional assessment by the same method will be performed regarding hemorrhoid pain. Any analgesia administered will also be recorded. Likewise, for follow-up purposes a blood test for serum magnesium concentration will be taken before and after treatment. Period of follow-up will be 48-72 hours from childbirth.

NCT ID: NCT01255839 Completed - Caesarean Section Clinical Trials

The Balloon Project for Birth Induction

Start date: December 2002
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The use of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) for induction of labour in women with unfavourable cervices is well-established1. There are, however, potential side effects to prostaglandins, in particular the risk of uterine hypertonicity which may affect fetal outcome. In theory a mechanical ripening based on dilatation of the cervix as well as induction of production of endogenous prostaglandin has potentially less influence on the fetal outcome but a Cochrane review from 2001 scrutinized studies on mechanical ripening versus placebo/no treatment or prostaglandin E2. They conclude there is insufficient data to evaluate the effectiveness in terms of likelihood of vaginal delivery in 24 hours, and emphasise the need for large sample size studies and substantive outcomes. Two later randomised studies compared mechanical ripening to PGE2 and found discrepant results regarding time from induction to delivery. The primary purpose of the present study was in a randomized design to compare the efficacy of double-balloon catheter versus vaginal PGE2 (minprostin 3 mg) on induction of labour, duration of birth and fetal outcome. Secondary analyses were to evaluate the results for various subgroups, i.e. primipara/multipara, gemelli, vaginal birth after caesarean, preterm birth and intra uterine growth restriction.

NCT ID: NCT01190163 Terminated - Cesarean Section Clinical Trials

Open Label Comparative Trial of Dinoprostone Plus or Minus Oxytocin Versus Oxytocin Alone in Cervical Ripening for Labor Induction

SOFTNES
Start date: June 2010
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This is a comparative trial between oxytocin alone and dinoprostone for cervical ripening in unfavorable cervix pregnant women with 38 or more weeks of gestational age.

NCT ID: NCT00802646 Withdrawn - Vaginal Delivery Clinical Trials

The Effects of Combined Spinal Epidurals on Fever During Labor of First-Time Mothers

CSE
Start date: June 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine if the epidural of local anesthetics has an effect on fever that may occur in first time mothers during labor.

NCT ID: NCT00407290 Recruiting - Pregnancy Clinical Trials

The Impact of an Epidural Ropivacaine-Neostigmine Injection for Perineal Analgesia at the End of Labor.

Start date: March 2006
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Perineal pain after childbirth occurs in the majority of women (with or without episiotomy). Perineal pain can become source of chronic pain in 9%-12% of the cases. Neostigmine a cholinesterase inhibitor at a dose of 500µg combined with Sufentanil or Ropivacaine (=local anaesthetic) is an analgesic. The goal of this study is to examine the effect of the use of epidural Neostigmine for perineal analgesia at the end of the labor on acute pain and on the development of chronic pain post partum.