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NCT06938919
This study aims to evaluate the application of an electronic respiratory sound monitoring system during sedation for gastrointestinal endoscopy and to determine its effectiveness in improving sedation quality. Gastrointestinal endoscopy is a common medical procedure, but respiratory complications caused by sedation, such as hypoventilation and airway obstruction, are significant safety concerns. Traditional respiratory monitoring methods, such as end-tidal CO2 monitoring, are often unreliable due to difficulties in gas sampling during the procedure. In contrast, an electronic respiratory sound monitoring system can accurately capture tracheal breathing sounds and provide important parameters such as respiratory rate and airway obstruction ratio, helping clinicians avoid over-sedation. This study will conduct a randomized controlled trial with 120 participants, divided into a control group with conventional monitoring and an experimental group using the electronic respiratory sound monitoring system. The study will compare sedation dosage, airway complications, and recovery speed between the two groups, and further analyze the clinical value of the system's parameters. The findings of this study will contribute to improving the safety and precision of sedation during gastrointestinal endoscopy and provide evidence for future clinical guidelines.
NCT07160387
This study aims to evaluate the diagnostic role of gastrointestinal endoscopy in children presenting with failure to thrive and its correlation with histopathology and other diagnostic modalities.
NCT07060846
This study aims to compare the endoscopic versus open lumbar discectomy in diabetic patients.
NCT06953414
Airway management problems are key drivers for anesthesia-related adverse events. Awake tracheal intubation using flexible bronchoscopes with preserved spontaneous breathing (ATI:FB) is a recommended technique to manage difficult tracheal intubation in anesthesia, intensive care and emergency medicine. However, a prospective developed classification for this type of airway management is lacking. Due to the absence of a specifically tailored, validated classification for awake intubation with flexible bronchoscopes, many airway operators and institutions use classification tools that were originally developed for direct laryngoscopy, such as the percentage of glottic opening (POGO) score or Cormack-Lehane classification, although their diagnostic performance for the classification of ATI:FB is unknown. This prospective model development and validation study aims to develop two multivariable prediction models: a diagnostic prediction model to classify difficult ATI:FB after ATI:FB has been performed and a second prognostic prediction model to predict the risk for difficult ATI:FB before ATI:FB is performed. An additional aim is to develop a machine learning algorithm to evaluate ATI:FB.
NCT06884800
This study aims to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of laparoscopic toupet fundoplication (LTF) for treating gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) symptoms and disease-specific Quality of Life (QoL).
NCT04393064
Based on study showing the ability of using FEES in infant in NICU; so the aim of this study to screen the newborns graduated from NICU using clinical bed side evaluation as well as flexible endoscopic assessment of swallowing to identify the ones suffering from oropharyngeal and / or esophageal dysphagia as well as newborns at risk for aspiration \&aspiration pneumonia to tailor or identify appropriate feeding plan for those high risk popularities and support them
NCT01869296
The purpose of this study is to compare the cecal intubation rate between two endoscopy water pump with different flow rates (1.7 ml/sec vs 10.4 ml/sec) in water immersion colonoscopy examination in unsedated patients undergoing diagnostic colonoscopy.