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Active clinical trials for "Abortion, Spontaneous"

Results 71-80 of 276

Sildenafil Citrate in Early Unexplained Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

MiscarriageRecurrent

Recurrent unexplained spontaneous miscarriage (RSM) is defined as three consecutive pregnancy loss prior to 20 weeks from the last menstrual period. 1% to 2% of women experience RSM. Treatment of URSM is a challenging issue. The currently available lines of treatment according to simplicity of use, reliability and degree of invasiveness include corticosteroids, sildenafil citrate, aspirin, heparin and immunoglobulins (besides good antenatal care), but up to now there are no prospective randomized studies, powerful enough, to determine a significant difference between these therapeutic protocols, with any of the above mentioned pharmacological agents. Sildenafil Citrate (Viagra®), a vasodilator, is also described as an anti-inflammatory agent. While improving uterine blood flow in the proliferative phase, NO may have detrimental effects at the level of the endometrium during the implantation window. The NO- mediated release of cytokines such as tumour necrosis factor- from activated natural killer cells has been implicated as a cause of implantation failure. Based on these observations, this study attempts was made to study uterine arteries and sub-endometrial blood flow during the luteal phase in normal fertile women and in patients with Unexplained recurrent miscarriage

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Topic Cervical Anesthesia Plus Paracervical Blockade for Pain Control During Endouterine Manual...

PainAbortion1 more

To compare the effectiveness of lidocaine gel plus paracervical blockade vs. lidocaine gel alone in the management of pain during endouterine manual aspiration.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Cohort of Patients Presenting Unexplained Recurrent Miscarriages and Identification of Early Miscarriage...

Miscarriage

About 1 to 3% of women of childbearing age have repeated early spontaneous miscarriages (RCF) defined by at least 3 fetal losses before 14 weeks of gestation. RCFs may be related to parental chromosomal abnormalities, congenital or acquired uterine abnormalities, hormonal causes (e.g. type 1 and 2 diabetes, ovarian failure), infectious etiology, constitutional or acquired thrombophilia or sickle cell disease. The presence of antiphospholipid antibodies, antithyroid and anti-transglutaminase antibodies in approximately 10% of cases suggests an autoimmune origin for these fetal losses. The role of other antibodies, in particular unconventional antiphospholipid antibodies, remains to be established. Indeed half of RCF cases would be due to an immunological dysregulation of the mother leading to a decrease in tolerance to the fetus. Several studies have shown immune abnormalities, such as an imbalance of pro and anti-inflammatory cytokines, an increase in cytotoxic cells and a defect in regulatory cells in the blood of patients. The assessment of these immune abnormalities is not currently carried out routinely in France in women with recurrent early miscarriages. When one of these known causes is excluded, it is unexplained RCF which represents 50% of RCF. In these women with unexplained RCF, slightly more than half could be linked to aneuploidies and primary recurrent spontaneous abortions. The evaluation of the degree of aneuploidy and the genetic origin of fetal losses remains difficult, the examination of the sample of tissue from the miscarriage being rarely available, due to the spontaneous nature of the loss. The constitution of a prospective cohort of patients with RCF is an essential step in exploring the factors associated with the success of treatment.

Not yet recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Sublingual Versus Vaginal Misoprostol In Medical Treatment of First Trimestric Missed Miscarriage...

Missed Abortion

The aim of this work is to compare the effectiveness of vaginal versus sub-lingual misoprostol for medical treatment of first trimester missed miscarriage.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Comparative Effectiveness of Pregnancy Failure Management Regimens

Spontaneous Abortion

The purpose of the study is to compare the effectiveness of combination treatment (mifepristone premedication plus single-dose misoprostol) to single-dose misoprostol (standard of care) for the management of early pregnancy failure.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Potential Role of microRNA 410 and BIRC7 Pathways in Unexplained Recurrent Spontaneous Miscarriage...

AbortionHabitual

The definition of recurrent spontaneous abortion (RSA) has changed over the years, and most societies now advocate defining RSA as two or three consecutive or discontinuous miscarriages with the same sexual partner before 24 weeks gestation In recent years, the incidence of this disease has been on the rise, occurring in about 1%- 5% of pregnancy in women at childbearing age, and the success rate of second pregnancy in RSA females has been significantly reduced The etiology of RSA is extremely complex, including anatomical factors, genetic factors, endocrine factors, infectious and immune factors, and pre-thrombosis etiology. However, the cause of the disease is unclear in half of patients and known as unexplained recurrent spontaneous abortion (URSA)

Not yet recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Thyroxine Therapy for Recurrent Pregnancy Loss in Hypothyroid Women

Recurrent Early Pregnancy LossThyroid Diseases

The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate the influence of thyroxine supplementation on pregnancy outcomes in women with varying levels of Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone (TSH), who have experienced recurrent pregnancy loss in the first trimester. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does thyroxine treatment improve pregnancy outcomes in women with TSH levels between 2.5 mU/L and 4 mU/L? Is the effect of thyroxine treatment different in women with TSH levels higher than 4 mU/L? Participants will be grouped based on their TSH levels, into two groups - those with TSH levels between 2.5 mU/L and 4 mU/L, and those with TSH levels higher than 4 mU/L. They will then be given thyroxine treatment. Researchers will compare these two groups to see if the pregnancy outcomes differ based on the different TSH levels and thyroxine treatment.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Estradiol Pretreatment With Misoprostol in Second Trimester Miscarriage

Miscarriage

To compare the effectiveness of estradiol pretreatment with misoprostol and vaginal misoprostol alone in induction of second trimestr miscarriage.

Completed20 enrollment criteria

Management of Women With an Incomplete Miscarriage

Miscarriage

Miscarriage is defined as the spontaneous loss of a pregnancy before 24 weeks' gestation, that is, before the fetal viability. The clinical signs of miscarriage are usually vaginal bleeding associated abdominal pain and cramping . The miscarriage is named 'complete' or 'incomplete' according to whether or not tissues are retained in the uterus. If a woman has minimal bleeding but her cervix is closed, this is known as a 'threatened miscarriage. However; if the pregnancy is still inside the uterus but the cervix is open, this is described as an 'inevitable miscarriage', which it will not usually be possible to save the fetus. From many years, the surgical curettage ('evacuation of the uterus') was considered the 'gold standard management' for miscarriage to remove the retained placental tissue. It is quickly performed and removed almost all the retained products of conception. However, the routine surgical evacuation of the uterus associated with higher rate of morbidity and mortality and should be limited for special indications. Many studies compared the effectiveness of medical treatment compared to surgery in management of incomplete abortion. There is only one study compared the curettage with expectant management in those women after medical therapy.However; none of them, looked at the effectiveness of the second chance of medical treatment in management of incomplete abortion in trial to avoid the surgical intervention after failure of previous medical treatment. So we think that the immediate evacuation using surgical intervention is truly unnecessary in most cases of failed medical abortion and the patients may get benefit from another trial of medical treatment.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Misoprostol 400 µg Versus 200 µg for Cervical Ripening in 1st Trimester Miscarriage

Miscarriage in First Trimester

Local current protocol for cervical ripening in 1st trimester miscarriage recommends 400 µg of misoprostol intravaginally 3 hours before uterine evacuation. This regime has been recommended by some international guidelines . So far, there are no recent studies comparing cervical dilatation between 400 µg of misoprostol and a reduced dose (e.g., 200 µg) for 6 hours. If cervical ripening is similar between these two regimens(i.e., 200µg regimen is not inferior to 400µg regimen), costs reductions and lower side effects may be issued without losing quality of cervix dilatation.

Completed14 enrollment criteria
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