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Wrist Injuries clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06086392 Recruiting - Hand Injuries Clinical Trials

Perineural Dexamethasone in Supraclavicular Brachial Plexus Block for Anesthesia After Pediatric Hand/Wrist Surgery

Start date: October 17, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Effect of Perineural Dexamethasone on the Duration of Supraclavicular Brachial Plexus Block for Anesthesia After Pediatric Hand/Wrist Surgery

NCT ID: NCT06046404 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Distal Radius Fractures

Refraining From Closed Reduction of Dislocated Distal Radius Fractures in the Emergency Department

RECORDED
Start date: May 8, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators test the efficacy of closed reduction in displaced distal radial fractures in the emergency department.

NCT ID: NCT05835440 Recruiting - Wrist Injuries Clinical Trials

Improving Wrist Injury Pathways (I-WIP) Study

I-WIP
Start date: August 1, 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Wrist injuries represent a considerable problem for both patients and the NHS. Around 70,000 patients per year in the UK attend hospitals with serious wrist pain after an injury, only to find that their x-ray is considered to be 'normal'. The National Institute of Care and Health Excellence (NICE) advises that these patients should be given MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scans early on, within 2 weeks. Early MRI gives patients the best care, by picking up the serious injuries requiring early treatment and by helping reassure those without serious injuries to get back to activities quickly. This saves the NHS staff time and money by reducing unnecessary clinic attendances. Although these benefits from early use of MRI scans, and the NICE guidance, are clear, it is know from our recent national (UK) survey that only 11 of the 87 UK hospitals that we surveyed used MRI scans for these patients. The gap between what the best evidence suggests and what happens in clinical practice is a complex issue that requires further investigation. To develop a complex intervention to address this problem,a better understanding of the reasons why hospital services are currently unable to adopt the NICE guidance is needed. Clinical interventions in surgery exist on a spectrum from simple, such as closing a wound with stitches, to the complicated (carrying out a joint replacement for a neck of femur fracture) to complex (improving trauma theatre efficiency). The latter, more complex variety, are characterised by the 1) number of components in the intervention, 2) the range of behaviours targeted 3) the range and different levels of target recipients, 4) the expertise and skills required by those delivering and receiving the intervention 5) and or by the level of flexibility permitted in the intervention delivery. In 2000, the UK Medical Research Council (MRC) established guidance for developing and evaluating complex interventions to improve the delivery of health care services. An important stage in developing complex interventions and improving care is to fully understand current pathways and the context of care. This qualitative study aims to develop a better understanding of wrist injury pathways, and their context, in the NHS. We aim to (1) understand the barriers to early MRI for painful wrists and (2) understand what is important to patients when being treated with a wrist injury.

NCT ID: NCT04370626 Recruiting - Trauma Clinical Trials

The Canadian Prospective Pragmatic Perilunate Outcomes Trial

C3PO
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

This is a unique three-fold prospective and retrospective study. With this approach, all previous and current PLIs presented at participating study sites will have the potential to be included in the study. Our goal is to collect all relevant injury and surgical parameters of the Perilunate spectrum. The investigators plan to identify each hospital within Canada that normally treats PLIs and to record injury and demographic information on each PLI that occurs in this country over a two to three-year period. Our protocol includes scheduled two, five, and 10-year follow-up intervals.

NCT ID: NCT03830775 Recruiting - PRP Clinical Trials

A Prospective Randomized Double Blinded Controlled Trial of Non-Operative Management of TFCC Injuries

TFCC
Start date: October 2, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Platelet-rich Plasma (PRP) is formed when a patient's blood sample is concentrated by a commercially available centrifuge. The sample then contains a high concentration of growth factors and has been used for numerous indications in a number of joints. This process has not yet been proven for non-operative management of the Triangular FibroCartilage Complex (TFCC), which is a very commonly injured soft tissue structure in the wrist. This study seeks to determine the efficacy of PRP for TFCC injuries.

NCT ID: NCT02401568 Recruiting - Joint Instability Clinical Trials

Morphologic and Biomechanical Analysis of the Carpal Ligaments

EDLIS
Start date: February 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Compare various dynamic biomechanical markers (distances and angles) in the wrist during dynamic CT studies in three groups of patients: Normal subjects, with scapholunate instability and with other types of wrist instability.