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The Application of Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Clinical Pathway in Posterior Cervical Spine Surgery

P

Peking University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Cervical Spondylotic Myelopathy
Ossification of Posterior Longitudinal Ligament in Cervical Region

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05149404
LM2020289

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study intends to establish a multidisciplinary collaborative ERAS clinical pathway of cervical posterior surgery,and to verify its effectiveness, safety and value in health economics.

Full description

Enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) is a new model of deep cooperation between surgery,rehabilitation medicine, anesthesiology, nursing and other disciplines in recent years, which enables patients to start rehabilitation training as soon as possible after surgery and improves the comprehensive effect of surgery. Posterior cervical surgery is traumatic, and it is significant to enhance postoperative rehabilitation to improve the overall efficacy of patients. Currently, there are no clear guidelines supporting the clinical effectiveness of ERAS in reducing complications, reducing costs, and enhancing recovery after posterior cervical surgery. Therefore, this study aims to establish a multidisciplinary ERAS model for posterior cervical surgery in Peking University Third Hospital and verify its clinical effectiveness. This is a multi-center, multidisciplinary prospective cohort study,in which the orthopedics department was combined with the anesthesiology department, rehabilitation department, nutrition department, operating room and nursing team to establish the ERAS clinical pathways for posterior cervical spine surgery. Clinical pathways include surgical procedure optimization, rehabilitation procedure optimization, anesthesia and nursing procedure optimization. As it is optimized and promoted,the ERAS clinical pathways will improve the curative effect and prognosis of posterior cervical surgery, so that more patients with cervical spondylosis will benefit.

Enrollment

400 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 18-70, gender unlimited;
  2. Diagnostic diagnosis of cervical spondylosis and consistent with the indications of posterior spinal canal extended laminoplasty;
  3. Basis of serious diseases of centerlessness, brain, lung, kidney or other important organs, preoperative ASA score I-II;
  4. Agree to participate in the study and sign the informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

Trial design

400 participants in 2 patient groups

ERAS group
Conventional group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Yu Sun, Dr.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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