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UnknownNCT01361516

Comparison of General Anaesthesia and Sedation on the Stone Fragmentation in Lithotripsy

Comparison of General Anaesthesia and Sedation on the Stone Fragmentation Efficacy of the Third Generation Lithotriptor

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
180 (estimated)
Sponsor
Hadassah Medical Organization · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of the study is to compare the impact intravenous sedation versus general anesthesia on the efficacy of stone fragmentation in extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy treatment.

Detailed description

The newer lithotriptors were reported to be less efficacious than the Dornier HM3 lithotriptor; and it is not clear the reason why there is decrease in efficacy of the new lithotriptors. Is it due to their small focal point or to increased patient movement while under intravenous sedation.When the patients get sedated then it will be difficult to control their respiratory movements. Retrospective comparisons suggest that intravenous may facilitate earlier discharge if no manipulation of the airway was done; but they are often associated with pain, hypoxemic respiratory episodes and disruptive movements during lithotripsy Instead of intravenous sedation, general anesthesia offer pain free procedures, no movement of the patient and controlled movement of the respiration leads to stable position of the urinary stones and receives persistent shock wave energy on to the stone bringing about better and early fragmentation. Hence we work on the hypothesis that the new generation shock wave lithotripters have a small focal point, every movement of the stone during the respiration or patient movement, will take the stone out of the focus and there results in loss of shocks leading to lithotripsy failure and use of more fluoroscopy for refocusing the stone. Thus we think the proper choice of anesthetic technique will improve the efficacy of stone fragmentation in shock wave lithotripsy treatment at least in those who are obese and suffers from occult sleep- apnoea syndrome

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERAnaesthesia and LithotripsyThe efficacy of stone fragmentation during lithotripsy procedure is compared under two types of anaesthesia

Timeline

Start date
2011-07-01
Primary completion
2012-07-01
Completion
2012-09-01
First posted
2011-05-26
Last updated
2011-05-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01361516. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.