View clinical trials related to Intestinal Diseases.
Filter by:Background theme Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are chronic diseases that alternate flares of active inflammation with periods of clinical remission. The working capacity of patients may be affected both by disease activity and by the aggressive treatment or surgical intervention required for the management of the disease and its complications. Work disability and impairment are especially important in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) because the disease affects young individuals who are generally employed and fully active. Although there are several indexes in the literature that assess the degree of work disability due to IBD, all have a high degree of subjectivity, so none can be used to request disability pensions. Experience of the research group on the subject Our group has developed a line of research on work disability associated with IBD. Initially the investigators have studied the parameters that condition the granting of disability pensions of Spanish courts. Subsequently, a population study of the prevalence of work disability in Spain has been carried out. Finally, the investigators develop and validated a disability index for CD (published in its extensive and reduced form) and for UC (currently under review). Hypothesis The IBD generates a work disability that can be measured objectively. Establishing the parameters related to disability is essential to promote equity in administrative and judicial decisions related to the granting of disability pensions to patients with IBD. Objective Development and validation of an objective index to measure the degree of disability in IBD. Material and methods: Study 1: A self-reported and objective questionnaire of disability will be developed based on the data of the population survey already carried out by our group. Patients from a previous study (n 293) will be included. The relationship of different objective variables and disability outcomes will be analyzed with a univariate and a subsequent multivariate analysis. Alternative work disability scores will be developed. Study 2: for the validation of the questionnaire a new online interview will be performed, patients from patients' assocations will be asked to participate. Data Collection: patients will answer a online survey administered with the SurveyMonkey © platform. Participant will answer questions about demographics, disease activity, treatment and complications and data regarding disability. Patients will also complete the SCDWDQ (Short Crohn's Disease Work Disability Questionnaire), Work Productivity and Activity Index (WPAI), IBDQ-9, the EuroQol and IBD-DI (IBD disability index). Statistical analysis: psychometric properties of the index will be evaluated: 1. Convergent validity: the Spearman correlation will be used to correlate the objective disability score with IBD-DI and SCDWDQ. 2. Discriminant validity: it will be measured by the t-test among patients with different degrees of disability (inactive-active, hospitalization-no hospitalization, surgery-no surgery).
Heart disease and failure are the major causes of mortality and morbidity worldwide, despite significant advances in medical technologies in the diagnosis and treatment of the disease. Cardiovascular disease may arise for various reasons including the steadily increasing incidence of obesity, type 2 diabetes, genetic, environmental, dietary and lifestyle factors. Besides all these, there is much evidence suggetsing that inflammation is an important player in the pathogenesis of heart disease, as well as atherogenesis and atherosclerosis.
Researchers are trying to determine if withdrawal of budesonide therapy in patients with immune-mediated enteropathies doing well on therapy will result in worsening symptoms, histology, quality of life, and micronutrient/nutritional status when compared to continued therapy.
Nurse-administered propofol sedation has become the standard procedure for colonoscopy in Germany. Although patient satisfaction with this method is high, there is little data about the satisfaction of the examiner and factors that might negatively influence this satisfaction. Often due to the fact that the sedated patient usually expresses pain by movements of the body and paralinguistic sounds the examination has to pause until the next propofol bolus induces a deeper sedation. In order to measure the correlation of examiner satisfaction and negative factors the investigators initiated this prospective observational study. During this study examiner satisfaction and the correlation with observer reported pain (movements and paralinguistic sounds) will be measured. Additionally different biopotentials (electromyography, skin conductance level, body temperature, pulse) of the patient will be recorded during the examination and feature pattern will be correlated to the observer reported pain in order to detect pain before the expression of pain leads to a pause in the colonoscopy examination. Other factors that might influence examiner satisfaction, like duration to reach the caecum and duration of polypectomy will additionally be evaluated.
Inflammatory bowel disease often requires immunomodulators, such as methotrexate, to maintain disease remission. This medication is administered as one dose weekly. Methotrexate can cause folic acid deficiency, so the current recommendation is to give daily folic acid supplementation while on methotrexate. Standard of care is to administer folic acid supplements daily. Patient compliance with daily folic acid is often suboptimal. The rationale is that weekly folic acid supplementation is as efficacious as daily dosing, and less frequent dosing likely will help improve patient compliance. The optimal dosing schedule of folate supplementation in relation to methotrexate is not known and there are not many research studies that have studied changing dosing of folate supplementation. One particular research study examined the effect of different dosing of folic acid supplements in patients with rheumatoid arthritis taking methotrexate. The study showed that folic acid at two different doses per week (5 mg low dose vs 27.5 mg high dose) did not effect the efficacy of methotrexate therapy, and patients who were on either folic acid supplementation had lower toxicity scores compared to patients not on folic acid supplementation. This study shows that folic acid dosed once per week can be useful in preventing methotrexate toxicity for rheumatoid arthritis patients. There were no studies that could be found that have studied this correlation for pediatric inflammatory bowel disease. Based on this current study, once weekly dosing of folic acid in IBD patients on methotrexate has the potential to be as efficacious as daily dosing.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) affects 1 in 500 to 1,000 people in the West. Previously a disease predominantly of the West, there is now a marked increase in the incidence of ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) in Asia, with an estimated prevalence of 1 in 3,000 and 1 in 10,000 respectively[1]. The rapid increase of IBD in Asian raising concern of investigators. Therefore setting up a large scale biobank with comprehensive clinical data is require.
This study will recruit persons with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. The investigators will contact people in an ongoing study (called IMAGINE) to recruit persons with high levels of stress, anxiety, or depression who are interested in a web-based program focused on skills in managing stress, anxiety and depression (a self-directed psychosocial intervention). The goal is to develop an internet-based psychosocial intervention to help persons with inflammatory bowel disease to cope with high levels of stress, anxiety or depression.
Trial for IBD patients non-responsive to biological drugs, using medical app reminding patients to take their physician-prescribed medications
Comparison of trough level-based spacing and clinical-based spacing of infliximab infusions in patients with inflammatory bowel disease in deep remission A prospective, multicenter, open-label, randomized, controlled Study
This study evaluates the addition of a laparoscopic Burch colposuspension procedure at the time of laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy to prevent stress urinary incontinence. Half of the participants will undergo Burch colposuspension procedure at the time of sacrocolpopexy, and half of the participants will undergo sacrocolpopexy alone.