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NCT07148648
Chest wall resections, often performed for tumors, infections, or trauma, result in significant defects that require reconstruction to restore structural integrity and functionality. The use of twisted stainless steel wires (No. 05) for chest wall reconstruction offers a cost-effective and practical alternative. Steel wires provide robust structural support, allow dynamic movement of the chest wall during respiration, and are associated with improved postoperative pain control.
NCT06774755
Patients requiring thoracic reconstruction often suffer from numerous comorbidities, such as obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis and cardiovascular diseases, respiratory diseases. The clinical picture of these patients must be carefully stabilized in the preoperative period since the listed diseases are associated with a poor reconstructive outcome. Furthermore, it is necessary to preoperatively determine the spirometric characteristics in cases where the intervention may alter the respiratory dynamics to evaluate the patient's ability to tolerate the procedure. The primary objective of the study is to identify the best diagnostic-therapeutic approach in cases of complex chest wall defects, retrospectively evaluating the outcomes and therapeutic choices implemented, through a reassessment of the interventions performed and the clinical progress of patients undergoing complex thoracic and sternal reconstruction interventions managed in a multidisciplinary and non-multidisciplinary manner
NCT04448574
Pectus excavatum (PE) or funnel breast is the most common congenital deformity of the chest wall, which occurs in about 1 in 400 births with a boy to girl ratio of 4: 1 to 3: 1. The etiology of PE is largely undefined, but there are numerous indications that genetic factors play a role in the development of PE. Up to 40% of patients report affected family members with similar congenital deformities. In many families, PE follows a pattern that would be compatible with an autosomal dominant or recessive pattern of inheritance. The data on the frequent occurrence of PE in family members fluctuate greatly and only a few genes associated with a PE have been identified so far.