View clinical trials related to Intestinal Diseases.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ustekinumab as intravenous (IV: into the vein) infusion in induction study in participants with moderately to severely active Ulcerative Colitis (UC) and as subcutaneous (SC) administration in maintenance study in participants with moderately to severely active Ulcerative Colitis (UC) who have demonstrated a clinical response to Induction treatment with IV ustekinumab.
Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are chronic Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) and may affect all segments of the digestive tract.
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of the combination of mebendazole plus quinfamide for the treatment of intestinal helminthiasis and amoebiasis in Mexican population.
Consequences of Colon Hydrotherapy plus probiotic intervention on composition of GI microbiota and well being are analysed in subjects claiming GI inconveniences due to Irritable Bowel Syndrome or food intolerances.
This study evaluates the effectiveness of a neurostimulator applied to the outer ear for adolescents with functional gastrointestinal disorders. The neurostimulator provides nerve stimulation to a branch of the vagus nerve which is thought to be involved in transmission of pain signals. Half of the study subjects will receive an active nerve stimulator while the other half will receive an inactive one.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) groups together Crohn's Disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC). Its prevalence is high representing approximately 0.4% of the population. The peak incidence for these diseases ranges between 2 and 30 years of age with a second peak for CD recently reported at 60. These diseases develop over time into complications requiring in 2/3 of cases surgical resection procedures in CD and colectomy in over 20% of cases. Cohort data has recently shown that the early use of azathioprine from the first year would decrease the need for surgery. Aside from biologics, azathioprine is the most widely used immunosuppressant in IBD management. Its metabolism is highly variable in the overall population since over 10% of patients are slow metabolizers and 15% fast metabolizers. This explains partly treatment failures and side effects with thiopurines. A lot of research has shown that metabolite measurement of azathioprine (6-TGN end methylated derivatives) could be used clinically even if these results remain controversial. In fact, their positive predicative value (PPV) in clinical response does not exceed 60%. This costly testing cannot be done everywhere, is not reimbursed by national health services, and may not be used in some countries. It is, however, key in order optimize these drugs at a time when only two anti-TNFs are possible in the event of failure on thiopurines. Older studies have shown that MCV and lymphonenia could be markers for thiopurine impregnation. Recently, an American study provided a mathematic formula enabling to achieve over 80% PPV for the clinical response on AZA but this calculation needs to be confirmed and it is, moreover, patented (costly).
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) affects 250,000 adults in the United Kingdom (UK) and causes bouts of diarrhoea which are hard to control. Over a quarter of patients experience extremely distressing faecal incontinence (FI). Even when the disease is in remission, the majority of patients live in fear of not finding a toilet in time. This curtails their activities and quality of life. The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE 2007) has issued national guidance on actively asking patients about FI and a step-wise care plan for managing FI. However, this has not been evaluated in people with IBD, the vast majority of whom do not ask for help, even when they have frequent FI. Across six expert centres in the UK, the investigators will perform 3 linked studies: [1] The investigators will screen people with IBD, offering the opportunity to obtain help with bowel control. The investigators will compare uptake of a postal approach versus response to a proactive face-to-face asking approach at a physical or telephone clinical appointment. [2] The investigators will conduct a randomised controlled trial (RCT) comparing two different approaches (IBD nurse specialist plus self-help booklet versus self-help booklet alone) to see which one produces the best results in terms of reductions in FI, other symptoms, costs and quality of life at 6 months after intervention. Booklet group participants may access the nurse intervention at 6 months if they wish, when the RCT is finished. [3] Interviews will be performed at the end of the intervention, gathering patient views and preferences and staff perspectives via Qualitative interviews and free text questionnaire comments, to enable a rich understanding and interpretation of our results. The investigators will disseminate the results widely to people with IBD and health professionals and take active steps to embed successful interventions in NHS services, having gained sound evidence on how many people want help, whether intervention is effective in improving FI, and patient and staff views on interventions.
The purpose of this study is to confirm the sensitivity and specificity of the BÜHLMANN fCAL™ ELISA as an aid in diagnosis to differentiate between Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD; Crohn's Disease (CD), Ulcerative Colitis (UC), or indeterminate colitis) and Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). To estimate the predictive value of a positive test (positive predictive value (PPV)) and the predictive value of a negative test (Negative Predictive Value (NPV)) using the proposed test outcomes for BÜHLMANN Calprotectin Test results when used in patients referred for diagnostic evaluation with signs and symptoms suggestive of either IBS or IBD. To confirm the inter-laboratory consistency of test results for the BÜHLMANN fCAL™ ELISA. To provide exploratory observations of test results in patients between the age of 2 and 21 years. To provide a sample set from normal subjects with no symptoms or signs of gastrointestinal disease for use in Expected Value Testing.
Over 18,000 Irish people are affected by the inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. These illnesses often arise at a young age and can be associated with significant physical disability. In addition, there is considerable psychosocial disability associated with IBD. Previous studies have suggested that simple psychological interventions may be valuable in improving quality of life and may even improve disease activity. However, there has been no comprehensive trial to determine the precise effect of psychological interventions on quality of life (QOL), stress or disease activity. Our aim is to conduct a randomised controlled trial of a simple psychological intervention to determine it's effect on QOL and stress
This study is an observational study. The purpose of this study is to assess the relationship between bone health and daily physical activity in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Reduced bone mineral density is a common complication in pediatric IBD. Physical activity is an important determinant of health throughout the whole lifespan. Engaging in regular moderate-to-vigorous physical activity has important health benefits. Based on available evidence, the investigators hypothesize that daily moderate-to-vigorous physical activity could improve bone health (ie bone mineral density) in children and adolescents with IBD.