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NCT05681936
Building on recent improvements, state-of-the-art functional MRI will be applied as an advanced diagnostic tool for the lumbosacral cord in spinal cord injury (SCI) patients to characterize the remaining neuronal activity of the motor and sensory neurons. Alterations in the activity pattern will reveal the effect upon task-related spinal cord activity of the lower motor neurons and sensory neurons undergoing trauma-induced neurodegeneration, at a spatial specificity that has not been possible so far. Results of this study will be of crucial importance because SCI patients can only profit from regeneration-inducing therapies if spinal neuronal function is preserved below the level of lesion.
NCT05895968
Through a single-center, exploratory clinical study, the safety and effectiveness of using barb wire in the incision and suture of posterior cervical surgery in obese patients were evaluated, providing a basis for its wide clinical application in posterior cervical surgery.
NCT06528730
Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy (DCM) is an age-related irreversible degenerative disease predominantly affecting the elderly aged 50 and over. DCM is usually triggered by ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament or ossification of ligamentum flavum or prolapsed intervertebral disc over the cervical spine. Specific clinical signs characterized the presence of cervical spinal cord compression; including Hoffmann's sign, Finger Escape Sign, Scapulohumeral Reflex, and Reverse Supinator Reflex. Hand numbness, clumsiness, and gait disturbance. These are featured clinical manifestations and well-known indicators for detailed clinical and radiographic investigation, such as Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) for diagnosis and surgical planning. Surgical intervention is considered to be the most effective treatment for DCM worldwide. It is the only evidence-based treatment to halt disease progression and allow modest improvement in function and quality of life. DCM progression is not specific to predict the timing for surgery, though it is still debated. Length of symptoms, pre-operative Modified Japanese Orthopaedic Association Scoring System for Cervical Myelopathy (mJOA) and physical performance are suggested as recovery predictors in DCM. In current practice, the offer of surgical treatment is entirely based on the combination of the evidence of cord compression in Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and mJOA. DCM who are at risk of critical neurological deficits have a reduced anteroposterior diameter of the spinal canal less than 9 mm or cross-sectional area of the spinal cord less than 40 sq. mm; mJOA less than 13 with evidence of functional deterioration will be offered with surgical intervention. MRI and mJOA are used as the golden standard for the indication of surgical intervention in the aspect of radiological deformities and self- perceived functional deficits. The concern on the clinical predictor, the physical performance, was overlooked and lacked a compromised criterion in the physical performance tests for surgical decisions. Therefore, this study aims to develop DCM-specific criteria from physical performance tests in predicting the surgical indication for DCM in the Chinese population.
NCT01988259
To proof patients' benefit of minimally invasive surgery in the dorsal cervical spine an apparatus to examine head-neck-coordination was constructed. Two different surgical techniques will be compared: Laminoplasty: open approach vs minimally invasive surgery (MIS)-approach; Foraminotomy: open approach vs MIS-approach. Each patient will be tested before surgery, postoperative as well as 3 and 12 month follow-up. Hypothesis is that patients after MIS-approaches perform better in their head-neck-coordination as patients with open approaches.
NCT01052324
Remifentanil provides analgesia, suppresses airway reflex, has little effect on cognitive function. It can be used for conscious sedation during awake nasotracheal fiberoptic intubation. Target-controlled infusion is more reliable technique for maintaining optimal infusion rate than manual controlled infusion. The aim of this study is to determine the effect site concentration of remifentanil for successful conscious sedation during awake nasotracheal fiberoptic intubation.