Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05385276

Transverse Supraumbilical Versus Pfannenstiel Incision For Cesarean Section In Morbidly Obese Women

Transverse Supraumbilical Versus Pfannenstiel Incision For Cesarean Section In Morbidly Obese Women "A Randomized Controlled Trial"

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
Ain Shams Maternity Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

cesarean section is one of the most common operative procedures performed in modern obstetrics, that become increasingly common in both developed and developing countries for a variety of reasons today, thus any useful refinement in the operative technique, however minimal, is likely to yield substantial benefits. In morbidly obese women with a panniculus, the supraumbilical incision is a new technique that showed definite advantages over the Pfannenstiel incision that will avoid burying the wound under a large panniculus and affords excellent abdominal exposure, less blood loss, less post-operative pain, earlier ambulation, and shorter hospital stay. All these advantages were attributed to minimal tissue manipulation.

Detailed description

The prevalence of obesity has reached pandemic proportions across nations. Morbid obesity has a dramatic impact on pregnancy outcomes. Cesarean section in these women poses many surgical, anesthetic, and logistical challenges. The rapid upswing in obesity prevalence across nations, ages, and ethnic groups has reached alarming and pandemic proportions. The prevalence of morbid obesity (BMI\>40 kg/m2) has increased by 50% between 2000 and 2005, with 8% of women in the reproductive age group being morbidly obese. The percentage of women with a body mass index (BMI) of 50 Kg/m2 or more has increased five-fold in 20 years. Obesity is currently the most prevalent health threat the world over and its influence on general health is rapidly increasing. The incidence of pregnancy-related pathology is higher in obese patients. Obstetricians are often confronted with difficult decisions when such patients are about to give birth. Indeed, in obese patients, labor is induced twice as frequently and vaginal delivery has to be interrupted more frequently due to an abnormal fetal heart rate or fetopelvic disproportion.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURETransverse supraumbilical incisionThe skin incision will be performed as a straight transverse skin incision 3-5cm above umbilicus after maximum retraction the panniculus caudally using two towel clips, to facilitate the approach to the lower uterine segment The skin incision is a transverse upward concavity, typically initiated two finger-breadths above the symphysis pubis and extended in the direction of the anterior superior iliac spine below and medial to it about (2 - 3 cm) .
PROCEDUREPfannenstiel IncisionThe skin incision is a transverse upward concavity, typically initiated two finger-breadths above the symphysis pubis and extended in the direction of the anterior superior iliac spine below and medial to it about (2 - 3 cm).

Timeline

Start date
2021-05-01
Primary completion
2023-01-01
Completion
2023-02-01
First posted
2022-05-23
Last updated
2022-05-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Egypt

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05385276. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.