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Endoscopic Mucosal Injection Versus Ultrasound-Guided Injection of Triamcinolone to Treat Subglottic Stenosis

Endoscopic Mucosal Injection Versus Ultrasound-Guided Injection of Triamcinolone to Treat Subglottic Stenosis

Recruiting
18-65 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study employs a multicenter, randomized controlled trial method, where patients meeting the inclusion criteria for subglottic stenosis are randomly divided into two groups. These groups are respectively undergoing translaryngeal endoscopic mucosal injection and ultrasound-guided injection of triamcinolone treatment. The comparison will focus on various indicators such as therapeutic effect, incidence of adverse reactions, treatment costs, and hospital resource utilization between the two groups. The safety and effectiveness will be compared to determine the relative merits of the two treatment methods.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 1: "Diagnosed with subglottic stenosis through laryngoscopic examination or imaging studies such as CT."
  • 2: "Experiencing symptoms related to subglottic stenosis, such as breathing difficulties, hoarseness, etc."

Exclusion Criteria:

  • 1: "Severe cardiopulmonary dysfunction, patients extremely debilitated and unable to tolerate the procedure."
  • 2: "Patients allergic to lidocaine, midazolam, triamcinolone, or any of their components."
  • 3: "Pregnant or lactating women."
  • 4: "Unstable angina, congestive heart failure, severe bronchial asthma."
  • 5: "Severe hypertension and arrhythmias, hemodynamically unstable, and severe respiratory failure (PaO2 <60mmHg after oxygen therapy or mechanical ventilation)."
  • 6: "Known coagulation dysfunction, inability to stop anticoagulants, antiplatelet agents, aspirin, or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs before treatment."
  • 7: "Patients do not agree to participate in this study."
  • 8: "Participation in other studies within the last three months and not withdrawn or concluded, or having received triamcinolone treatment less than 1 month ago."
  • 9: "Researchers believe there are any circumstances making the patient unsuitable for inclusion."

Study details
    Subglottic Stenosis

NCT06275269

China-Japan Friendship Hospital

8 September 2025

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