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Clinical Research Directory

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6 clinical studies listed.

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Cataract Surgery Anesthesia

Tundra lists 6 Cataract Surgery Anesthesia clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07325227

Study of Remimazolam for Cataract Surgery

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if the use of the sedative remimazolam improves the safety of patients having cataract surgery by decreasing the number of sedation-related complications during and after surgery, and shortening post-surgical cognitive recovery time.

Gender: All

Ages: 55 Years - 90 Years

Updated: 2026-01-08

1 state

Cataract Surgery Anesthesia
RECRUITING

NCT07036367

The Use of Sublingual Melatonin Premedication in Geriatric Cataract Surgery

Cataract surgery is routinely performed with anesthesia care, whereas anesthesia care for other elective, low-risk, outpatient procedures is applied more selectively. We hypothesize that sublingual melatonin will provide superior anxiolysis and sedation while maintaining a high safety profile and minimizing hemodynamic disturbances.

Gender: All

Ages: 60 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-01-07

2 states

Cataract Surgery Anesthesia
RECRUITING

NCT06874452

An Extension Test of Whether to Use Oral Anti-anxiety Drugs (XANAX) When Patients Choose Second Eye Cataract Surgery After Unblinding, and Analyze Their Anxiety, Satisfaction and Pain Satisfaction

Phacoemulsification is one of the most used surgical methods for cataract surgery today, and the surgeries are under the anesthetic and sedative to make it comfortable and safe for patients. The most important issue is which method is the best for reducing the patient's anxiety, pain, and discomfort during surgery. Previous studies have analyzed the impact of intravenous injection of sedative on the quality of phacoemulsification surgery; however, the impact of oral anti-anxiety drugs (XANAX) on cataract surgery has not been intensively studied. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to investigate the impact of XANAX on satisfaction in cataract surgery. Oral sedation is more convenient and safer than intravenous sedation. Therefore, the investigators will further analyze whether patients using oral anti-anxiety drugs will have an improvement in the pain, anxiety, overall satisfaction, and side effects related to nausea and dizziness in the phacoemulsification surgery. This study will detailed record the patient's status in various aspects using questionnaire scales and scores. Through this research, the investigators will have the opportunity to comprehensively improve the surgical quality of cataract patients in a safe and convenient manner. The investigators plan to collect data from patients who participated in the study "Anxiety and surgery satisfaction for cataract patient with different state anxiety" (Research Ethics Committee Case No.: 202302067MINB) from October 2023 to August 2025, and plan to undergo phacoemulsification and intraocular lens implantation surgery in their second eye with local anesthetic at the Department of Ophthalmology, National Taiwan University Hospital. The sample size of 250 participants was determined based on the type of intervention, expected effect size, outcome variability, desired statistical significance, trial power, and experiences from similar studies. Vulnerable populations and those with any relevant contraindications will be excluded during the enrollment process. All medical records and surgical process data, including privacy-related information, will only be accessible to professional medical personnel for analysis. The focus of this study will be on intraoperative satisfaction, pain scores, relevant discomfort symptoms during the surgery, and postoperative anxiety assessment scales.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 80 Years

Updated: 2025-11-28

Ophthalmology
Cataract Surgery Anesthesia
Oral Anxiolytic
+1
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07223866

The Impact of Physiologic Cataract Surgery on Patient Comfort and Medication Usage

The study will pertain to investigating the impact of high vs low IOP on the intraoperative experience and comfort for the patient and surgeon. Our hypothesis is that operating at a more physiological IOP using Unity VCS/CS and Centurion with Active Sentry at a higher, or more traditional IOP will result in significantly less discomfort/pain as assessed by the decreased need for rescue medication and lower VAS scores.

Gender: All

Ages: 60 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-11-10

1 state

Cataract and IOL Surgery
Cataract Surgery Anesthesia
Cataract Surgery Experience
+1
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06824935

Evaluation of Perioperative Anesthesia Requirements of Outpatient Cataract Patients

According to the literature, preoperative evaluation has been shown in studies to be the first step in ensuring that patients' anesthesia care is carried out safely. In cataract surgery, which is a day anesthesia procedure frequently observed in the geriatric population, topical-local anesthesia is mostly applied. It is believed that preoperative anesthesia evaluation will be beneficial due to the complications that may develop during the procedure, patient safety and therefore the duration of postoperative hospital stay. The aim of the study is to evaluate patients who may need anesthesia intervention among patients whose preoperative anesthesia evaluations have been completed due to the possibility of consultation from the anesthesia department if necessary for patients who will undergo cataract surgery with local-topical anesthesia.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-02-13

Preoperative Evaluation
Outpatient
Cataract Surgery Anesthesia
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06822023

Virtual Reality and Its Use in Reducing Perioperative Stress in Cataract Surgery

This project is to evaluate the benefits of utilising virtual reality (VR) headsets with the aim of reducing peri-operative anxiety in cataract surgery and hence reducing the need for sedation in patients with significant stress levels noted during preassessment. This is a novel study, and with the increased use of VR technology throughout medicine, we may be able to offer our patients alternative management modalities to reduce stress and reduce need for medications with their subsequent potential side effects. It may also improve the quality of care provided and patients' experience with the cataract extraction procedure and might reduce the social care burden associated with standard sedation procedures. All patients will need to fill a quick preoperative anxiety and information scale questionnaire to assess their level of anxiety utilising The Amsterdam Preoperative Anxiety and Information Score. Patients will be randomised into 2 groups: 1. Conventional group: patients will be prepared as per the standard routine clinical and further explanation of the procedure will be given. Before proceeding to the anaesthetic room, the patients will complete the anxiety score questionnaire again and given the option to proceed with sedation or opt out. 2. Interventional Group: patients will be prepared as per the standard routine clinical care; they will then be wearing the VR mask for 10 minutes. Before proceeding to the anaesthetic room, patients will complete the anxiety score questionnaire again and given the option to proceed with sedation or opt out. Post operation, a record will be taken of the surgeon's decision on whether they want the second eye cataract surgery to be done under sedation (this is already standard practice at our centre). Finally, the patient will be asked to fill in one final grading score on whether they are happy with their decision to take/not take sedation.

Gender: All

Updated: 2025-02-12

Virtual Reality
Eye Disease
Cataract Surgery Anesthesia
+1