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Showing 1-16 of 16 trials
NCT07123285
This randomized, controlled, double-blind clinical trial will evaluate the efficacy of photobiomodulation (PBM) combined with compression therapy in the healing of venous ulcers (VUs) in the lower limbs. A total of 96 participants will be allocated into two groups: Experimental Group (PBM + compression) and Control Group (sham PBM + compression). Treatments will be administered twice weekly for 16 weeks (32 sessions). The primary outcome will be complete wound healing. Secondary outcomes include changes in ulcer area and volume, pain (VAS), quality of life (SF-36), clinical severity (VCSS), wound quality (Bates-Jensen Scale), infrared thermography, and treatment costs. Data will be analyzed using ANOVA or Kruskal-Wallis, chi-square or Fisher's exact test, and Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, with a significance level of p \< 0.05.
NCT06812520
Background: Chronic Venous Disease (CVD) is a condition that affects a significant percentage of the world's population, and can range from mild symptoms such as telangiectasias to severe manifestations such as venous ulcers (VU). The gold standard UV treatment is compression therapy, however, people's adherence to it is variable due to several associated factors: physical, aesthetic and lack of education about compression therapy. Compression therapy acts by increasing interstitial pressure, thus decreasing the caliber of superficial and deep veins, decreasing venous pressure and edema . The study originates from clinical practice where it is observed that people do not adhere or abandon compression treatment, a situation that agrees with the literature review, so new trials on strategies to increase adherence are required (20). The proposed intervention: promoting adherence has a theoretical basis, a conceptual basis and an empirical basis. a) Theoretical basis: it incorporates the theory of self-care of chronic diseases with the incorporation of symptoms, due to the importance that these have for those who present them and for the self-care process, particularly with regard to maintaining self-care and adherence; in addition, the theoretical basis related to health interventions is incorporated. b) Conceptual basis: founded on vascular alterations that lead to the loss of skin integrity with the consequent imbalance: pain, edema, exudate, bad odor, so it is necessary for these to be recognized by patients and then by the professionals who serve them. c) Empirical basis: it incorporates compression therapy, considered the gold standard in the treatment of people with venous ulcers. Based on the evidence analyzed, the Lively Leg intervention developed by Heinen et al. was chosen as a basis. 2012, to which modifications were introduced based on the self-care theory, since, together, the symptoms of the ulcer, the associated chronic diseases and the characteristics of the people intervene in their adherence to compression therapy. The objective of the study is to evaluate the feasibility and preliminary effect of an educational intervention on adherence to compression therapy, pain and ulceration of the area in users who have a venous ulcer, in the commune of Hualpen, Chile, during the year 2024.
NCT04039789
Objectives: To evaluate the effectiveness of a structured educational intervention in physical exercise "Active Legs" as an adjuvant treatment to improve the healing of chronic venous ulcers at 3 months of follow-up, compared with the usual practice in people treated in primary care. Secondary objectives: To evaluate if the intervention active legs as an adjuvant treatment produces better results than usual practice in: degree of healing, recurrence, complete healing at 6 months, pain and quality of life. Describe degree of adherence and satisfaction with the intervention. Design: Randomized, multicenter, pragmatic, open clinical trial of parallel groups with 6 months of follow-up. Setting: Primary Care Health Centers (Madrid). Subjects: Patients with venous ulcers, with treatment in the nursing consultation of the participating centers. Sample: 224 participants (112 in each group). Intervention: Both groups will receive the usual treatment of cleaning, debridement based on humid environment cure and multilayer compression therapy according to the recommendations of Community of Madrid. The intervention group will also receive the structured educational intervention of lower limbs physical exercise and daily walking patterns. Variables: Main: complete healing at 3 months follow-up. Secondary: Degree of healing; ulcer area; quality of life; pain, related to the healing process, prognosis and recurrences; Sociodemographic and related adherence and satisfaction. Data analysis: Main effectiveness: comparison of the incidence of ulcers with complete healing at 3 months of follow-up in both groups, time to complete healing (Kaplan-Meier and Log-rank test). Adjustment of prognostic factors (Cox regression).
NCT06135246
This randomized controlled trial will evaluate the effects of high-intensity laser therapy on wound healing in patients with venous leg ulcers. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either laser therapy plus standard care or standard care alone. The laser therapy will be administered 3 times per week for 8 weeks or until ulcer closure. The primary outcome is proportion of participants with complete ulcer closure.
NCT02929056
The purpose of this study is to evaluate and compare healing characteristics, reduction in the size of the wound and to measure complete healing of the wound following the application of a biologic product dressing instead of the alginate dressing along with standard debridement and compression therapy versus the standard of care treatment for VLUs. The biologic product that will be used in this study is called AmnioExCel™.
NCT03688841
This study randomises patients with venous leg ulcers, to be managed either using conventional compression bandages or a bridged vacuum assisted closure system under compression.
NCT02896725
Venous leg ulcers (VLU) are the most common leg ulcer, can be painful, and limit work, lifestyles and activity, especially in older patients. Compression bandaging is the main treatment but there are few added treatments for patients with slow healing VLU. About 50% of patients with VLU may be slow healing. Research suggests using keratin dressings as well as using compression may help healing in patients with show healing VLU, but the current evidence is not enough to change clinical practice. The investigators will conduct a randomised controlled trial to test whether using keratin dressings is better than usual care for slow healing VLU.
NCT04310280
A randomized, split-plot, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. The varicose ulcer is divided into two (side A and B). Half of the wound's surface is treated locally with insulin (Glargine) applied at an approx depth of 3-4 mm. Treatment with insulin is administered for 7 days. Biopsy specimens of the two sides are obtained on days 0 and 7. A thermographic photograph of the wound is taken at days 0 and 7. The number of blood vessels and fibroplasia is evaluated as the main outcome.
NCT03304834
This is a single-center prospective study with a planned accrual of 35 patients with diagnosed symptomatic Lower Limb Veins System (Superficial, Perforating) Insufficiency (including recurrence at the thigh/groin level after previous treatment). The eligible patients must present a symptomatic Leg Veins System Insufficiency diagnosis which fulfills the inclusion/exclusion criteria. All patients will be consented at a Pre-Study Visit and evaluated for eligibility and for baseline characteristics of the disease. Patients will return to clinic on a separate day for the HIFU treatment. Device performance parameters will be collected during the HIFU visit. At follow-up visits at 3 days, 7 days and 3 months, changes in veins and flow characteristics will be evaluated by ultrasound and physical exam, and patient well-being, including pain and anxiety, will be evaluated by patient-reported VAS evaluations. Continued follow-up for a total of 3 months will be completed prior to subject study exit. Adverse events (AE) will be assessed at every study visit following HIFU treatment. An interim Safety Report will be issued after the first 5 patients will arrive at the 7 days visit and will be provided to the Ethics Committee. A second report will be issued once the first 5 patients will complete the follow-up period of 30 days and will be also provided to the Ethics Committee.
NCT02889913
Leg ulcers are frequent. There are no epidemiological studies available in France, but international studies estimate the prevalence between 0.045 and 0.63% of the total population, prevalence increases with age, reaching 5% of patients over 80 years. Extrapolating these prevalences in the French population between 28 000 and 395 000 people are affected in France a leg ulcer. It is a costly disease. In 2001, a French study conducted among 800 physicians, including 85.7% of general practitioners, involving more than 1000 patients with venous ulcers, it was estimated that the total cost of treatment per patient average was 888 32 euros. This is truly a public health problem. Leg ulcers are in 80% of cases of vascular causes (venous, arterial or arteriovenous mixed). However, there are rare causes of ulcers: skin carcinoma, infectious ulcers and vasculitis. These ulcers rare causes require specific treatments that can often heal. To diagnose, to perform a skin biopsy. Thus, the general practitioner must know when to put the indication for biopsy of a leg ulcer.
NCT02873728
The goals of this series of studies is to test the effect of RIC on chronic leg ulcers (Diabetic ulcers and venous ulcers) - and to improve the understanding of its biological mechanism. This is a prospective, double-blind, randomized, shame procedure-controlled study.
NCT02561013
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the product performance of a new adjustable compression system for the treatment of venous leg ulcers.
NCT00656383
Individuals referred to home care for leg ulcer management were randomized to nurse home visits (usual care) or nurse-run community clinics (intervention). The primary outcome will be the time to healing rates at three months. Secondary outcomes are: time to healing of all ulcers within the 12 month follow-up period, time to first recurrence of a healed ulcer, the number of weeks patients were free from ulcers, function, pain, and health related quality of life, client and provider satisfaction. We hypothesize that nurse-run neighborhood clinics result in better healing rates, more cost-effective care, and improved client and provider satisfaction than the home visiting model.
NCT00000431
Most chronic (long-lasting) wounds of the leg (also known as venous ulcers) fail to heal in a reasonable period of time. Although researchers have made great progress in understanding how the body repairs wounds, attempts to develop new treatments have been disappointing. In general, treatments based on recent findings about the details of wound repair have not greatly reduced the number of people who have chronic wounds. The long-term goal of this study is to evaluate a new approach for healing a chronic wound. Current methods of directly applying substances that are involved in wound healing to a chronic wound do not cause enough healing. PDGF-B (platelet-derived growth factor B), a factor associated with wound healing, might dramatically enhance healing if a genetically engineered virus is injected into the wound that causes cells in the wound to produce PDGF-B in large quantities.
NCT01449422
The main objective of this trial is to demonstrate that a local care strategy using URGO 310 3082 dressing is not inferior to a reference therapeutic strategy using a hydrofibre dressing in the management of venous ulcers. This non-inferiority hypothesis will be judged on the planimetric relative regression of the wound surface area after six weeks of treatment.
NCT00184873
Leg ulcers are often chronic or recurring complications of peripheral circulation disorders. Patients' lifestyles are known to influence leg ulcer occurrence and circulation disorders in general. Especially exercise and compliance with compression therapy are key elements in the course of leg ulcer healing and recurrence. Yet many patients demonstrate sedentary lifestyles and non-compliance and current practice offers no systematic approach in the promotion of compliance and physical activity in these patients. The purpose of the study is testing 'Lively Legs' a compliance promotion program for patients with leg ulcers. The study tests the program on effects regarding: * compliance with compression therapy and exercise levels * time to leg ulcer recurrence * cost effectiveness from a social perspective.