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Clinical Trials/NCT01739738
NCT01739738
Withdrawn
N/A

The Impact of Ureteral Stents on Peristalsis

University of British Columbia1 site in 1 countryDecember 2012

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Kidney Stones
Sponsor
University of British Columbia
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Effect of stent on ureteral peristalsis in stented ureter
Status
Withdrawn
Last Updated
6 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of the study is to investigate the impact of ureteral stents on the functioning of ureteral peristalsis (normal contractions in the ureteral organ muscle).

Detailed Description

Ureteral stents are commonly used in the field of urology to maintain urinary drainage and are inserted into ureters of patients who suffer from kidney stones, urinary tract infections or cancer. Usually the muscle cells of the ureter contract in a coordinated fashion (peristalsis) in order to provide urinary flow from the kidney into the bladder. By inserting a stent these contractions are disrupted, eventually resulting in a loss of peristalsis. This phenomena is accompanied by swelling of the kidney and pain, which are well-known negative side effects of stents. To avoid stent-related morbidity and improve patients care this issue needs to be investigated further. A first step is to analyse the impact of stents on peristalsis and to possibly bring these results into context with hypothesised molecular mechanisms involved in peristalsis.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
December 2012
End Date
December 2014
Last Updated
6 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Ben Chew, MD

Associate Professor

University of British Columbia

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • stone disease
  • localized tumor disease
  • hydronephrosis of unknown ethiology
  • patients who receive a prophylactic stent before a planned operation.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients being septic and in a life-threatening condition before or after stent-insertion
  • patients with tumors in a progressive state that affect the retroperitoneum (contralateral ureter might be affected and can not serve as a control for the stented side)
  • patients with Morbus Ormond (same reason as above)
  • patients requiring ureteral stents bilaterally (same reason as above)
  • long-term stented patients will be excluded as we are interested in evaluating the onset of changes in peristalsis rate which are expected to be most significant in an acute setting.
  • patients with preexisting abnormalities/pathologies of the urinary tract e.g. reflux disease, megaureter or bladder dysfunctions as these will likely affect our results
  • non English-speaking patients will be excluded as they will not be able to understand the letter of consents.
  • Exclusion criteria for control group:
  • known preexisting pathology in the urinary tract (see above)
  • volunteers who underwent previous surgical procedures on kidney, ureter or bladder within the past 5 years as this may change the starting position of our study

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Effect of stent on ureteral peristalsis in stented ureter

Time Frame: before and after stent insertion (approximately 30 minutes)

before and after stent insertion (approximately 30 minutes)

Secondary Outcomes

  • Effect of stent on ureteral peristalsis in non-stented ureter(30 minutes (pre and post stenting))

Study Sites (1)

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