Clinical Trials Logo

GERD clinical trials

View clinical trials related to GERD.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT05069493 Completed - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Long-term Follow-up After Hiatal Hernia Repair by Tension-free Mesh Closure or Simple Suturing

Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

10 years of follow-up after surgery for hiatal hernia by tension-free mesh closure or simple suturing.

NCT ID: NCT05042063 Recruiting - Asthma Clinical Trials

Acoustic Cough Monitoring for the Management of Patients With Known Respiratory Disease

Start date: September 15, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study pretends to evaluate the potential use of Hyfe Cough Tracker (Hyfe) to screen for, diagnose, and support the clinical management of patients with respiratory diseases, while enriching a dataset of disease-specific annotated coughs, for further refinement of similar systems.

NCT ID: NCT05041608 Enrolling by invitation - GERD Clinical Trials

Endoscopic Surgery for Gastrointestinal Disorders: A Multicenter Registry Study

Start date: February 17, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Currently, there is limited multi-center data on endoscopic surgery outcomes in western populations. Evaluation of these measurement would help the investigators compare them to conventional treatment modalities within current tertiary facilities; and consequently help the investigators identify appropriate treatment techniques and improve clinical management of patients at Rutgers RWJMS. The purpose of this retrospective registry study is to assess long term data on efficacy, safety and clinical outcome of Endoscopic Surgery within the gastrointestinal tract.

NCT ID: NCT04945304 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Bariatric Surgery Candidate

9-Step Magnetic Bariatric Revisional Surgery

Start date: May 31, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

RYGB represents one of the best alternatives for weight loss in obese patients achieving a weight loss of up to 60% and a resolution of comorbidities of 70%. Revision surgery contemplates multiple techniques including the conversion from one surgical technique to another, structural changes to the primary technique, among others. GERD is now a long-term problem for patients who have undergone LGS. RYGB is one of the best techniques to resolve this problem.

NCT ID: NCT04931706 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Nissen Sleeve by Single Port With Magnetic Assistance

Start date: June 5, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

New approach for Nissen Sleeve Gastrectomy by single port using double magnetic system

NCT ID: NCT04901429 Not yet recruiting - GERD Clinical Trials

Truncal Vagotomy in Patients Undergoing Revisional Sleeve Gastrectomy to Gastric Bypass

Start date: July 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy of performing a truncal vagotomy along with a sleeve to bypass revision surgery in reducing the severity and/or incidence of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) post-surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04846010 Recruiting - Depression Clinical Trials

Recovering Damaged Cells for Sequelae Caused by COVID-19, SARS-CoV-2

sequelae
Start date: March 1, 2021
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection can cause multiple system function disorders, and complicated symptoms last for an extended period. The virus can cause this continued infection, or the virus causes immune system function disorder and post-infectious autoimmune disease. The clinical symptoms can be smell loss, taste loss to liver function disorder, kidney function failure, different. No matter how complicated the systems showed in the clinic, all of the symptoms are due to the specific cells being damaged. Our clinical study is focused on recovering the damaged structure and function of the cells that could restore the organ function back to normal or close to normal

NCT ID: NCT04830930 Completed - GERD Clinical Trials

A Study to Investigate the Effect of Food on the PK, PD of CKD-381 in Healthy Volunteers

Start date: April 21, 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

A study to investigate the effect of food on the Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of CKD-381 in healthy volunteers

NCT ID: NCT04828733 Completed - Obesity Clinical Trials

One Anastomosis Gastric Bypass With Excluded Stomach Fundoplication: FundoRing vs Nissen vs OAGB Without Fundoplication

FundoRing
Start date: March 29, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background and study aims: Currently, one anastomosis Gastric Bypass (OAGB) is a common bariatric procedure. Obesity and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) are steadily increasing world weight and antireflux surgery must be performed simultaneously with bariatric surgery in obese patients. In these cases, most often for GERD patients OAGB procedures only with hiatus cruroraphy is performed. The goal of this randomized controlled clinical trial is to compare bariatric and antireflux results after OAGB plus suture cruroplasty with FundoRing (n=50) versus Nissen fundoplication (n=50) and versus without total fundoplication (n=50) for patients with morbid obesity and GERD. The main questions it aims to answer are: - What is the impact of wrapping the fundus of the excluded part of the stomach use FundoRing method in the experimental group against developing reflux esophagitis compare impact standard Nissen in OAGB? - What is the impact of excluded stomach fundoplication on weight loss in FundoRing group versus standard Nissen group in OAGB? Methods: Adult participants (n=150) are randomly allocated to one of three groups: Experimental surgical bariatric procedure in the first (A) group: patients (n=50) undergo the laparoscopic one anastomosis gastric bypass with excluded stomach fundoplication: FundoRingOAGB and suture cruroplasty (OAGB + SCP + FundoRing); Active comparator surgical bariatric procedure in the second (B) group: patients (n=50) undergo the laparoscopic one anastomosis gastric bypass with excluded stomach Nissen fundoplication and suture cruroplasty (OAGB + SCP +NF). Active comparator surgical bariatric procedure in the second (C) group: patients (n=50) undergo laparoscopic one anastomosis gastric bypass without excluded stomach fundoplication and only suture cruroplasty (OAGB + SCP). All patients are then followed up 12, 24, and 36 months after surgery where the changing body mass index and change of GERD symptoms (GERD-HRQL).

NCT ID: NCT04795934 Recruiting - GERD Clinical Trials

Multicenter Single-Blind RCT of CTIF Versus LNF For Treatment of GERD in Patients Requiring Hiatal Hernia Repair

CTIF
Start date: January 26, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This single-blind randomized control study will follow 142 subjects across 7 sites randomized on a 1:1 ratio to compare treatment efficacy and safety between TIF and LNF in GERD patients with hiatal hernia undergoing hernia repair.