View clinical trials related to Liver Cirrhosis.
Filter by:Portal hypertension (PHT) is the main consequence of advanced chronic liver diseases (ACLD) and is often associated with severe complications leading to increased morbidity and mortality. Currently, the gold standard for the evaluation of the severity of PHT is the hepatic venous-pressure gradient (HVPG). The disadvantage of using the HVPG, besides the availability of the technique only in referral centres, is in the case of patients with vascular liver disorders because the HVPG underestimates the severity of PHT. Recent studies have evaluated the feasibility of the pressure gradient measurement through endoscopic transgastric and transhepatic access using special kit with a 25-gauge FNA needle (Cook Medical, Winston-Salem, NC, USA) and a compact manometer (Cook Medical, Bloomington, Ind, USA) that has the disadvantage of high purchase cost, no tracing of pressure possible and has not yet been properly correlated with the gold standard HVPG measurement or PPG measurement thus limiting its use in current practice. The aim of the study is 1. to assess and compare the correlations in the porto-systemic gradient measurement between a) direct portal vein puncture during TIPS insertion, b) direct portal and hepatic pressure measurements using a 22 Gauge FNA needle during endoscopic ultrasound procedure and c) indirect portal vein pressure measurements using the interventional radiology based hepatic HVPG procedure in patients with cirrhosis submitted to TIPS procedure for complications of portal hypertension and 2. To evaluate and compare the porto-systemic gradient obtained by direct portal and hepatic pressure measurements using a 22 Gauge FNA needle during endoscopic ultrasound and indirect measurement through HVPG measuring in patients with presinusoidal hypertension and those with portal vein thrombosis.
Evaluating hemostasis in decompensated liver cirrhosis with novel hemostatic assays.
Patients with liver cirrhosis (LC) often exhibit fatigue, poor oral intake, and abdominal discomfort, which are the symptoms that are also shown in subjects with adrenal insufficiency (AI). Controversy exists upon over-diagnosis of adrenal insufficiency in patients with LC, because decreased albumin and/or cortisol binding protein lower total cortisol levels while free cortisol increases/or is preserved. The investigators assumed that measuring salivary cortisol or direct free cortisol using mass-spectrometry would provide a more accurate level of cortisol in LC patients. 50 patients with LC will be recruited and undergo a rapid ACTH stimulation test and their blood/ saliva will be collected and analyzed. The difference between serum free cortisol and total cortisol, as well as between salivary cortisol and total cortisol will be investigated to find the optimal way to diagnose AI in LC patients.
How to construct a novel, non-invasive, accurate, and convenient method to achieve prediction of hepatic venous pressure gradient (HVPG) is an important general problem in the management of portal hypertension in cirrhosis. We plan to compare the ability of three demensional-magnetic resonance elastography (3D-MRE) to two demensional-magnetic resonance elastography (2D-MRE) to establish a risk stratification system and perform tailored management for portal hypertension in cirrhosis.
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about an intensive monitoring plan (transitional care program) in patients with cirrhosis and excessive swelling that are going to be discharged from the hospital. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - How much time and what resources are needed to run such a program - How well do patients follow up with the phone calls, bloodwork, and doctor appointments? - Do the patients enrolled in the program have less need for hospitalization later, less kidney injury, better fluid control, and/or better survival compared to patients that are not in the program? Participants will - Be given a digital scale and a binder with educational material and a log to monitor their weights after discharge from the hospital - Receive a phone call from the study team within 72 hours of discharge and weekly - Be given a follow up appointment with hepatology within 4 weeks of discharge Researchers will compare participants in this program to patients that receive normal care to see if there are differences in need for hospitalization later, kidney injury, fluid control, and/or survival.
The aim of the study is to improve the results of related transplantation of the right liver lobe by verifying the general predictors of the development of hemostatic system disorders and optimizing a comprehensive program for thrombohemorrhagic complications preventing.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the treatment response to terlipressin and albumin in patients with suspicion of HRS-AKI and signs of chronic parenchymal kidney disease (HRS-AKI-like syndrome) compared to patients without signs of chronic parenchymal kidney disease (HRS-AKI).
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), estimated to be 17% prevalent in France, can lead to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which in turn can progress to fibrosis, the ultimate stage of which is cirrhosis, a major cause of liver transplantation. The prevalence of NASH is increasing worldwide, along with that of type 2 diabetes and obesity. Significant liver fibrosis is estimated to affect at least 2.6% of the adult population in France. The prognosis of patients with NASH is directly linked to the stage of liver fibrosis determined by biopsy, and these biopsies must now be repeated to assess the effect of treatments. Hepatic fibrosis is traditionally classified into five stages, from the absence of fibrosis (F0) to severe cirrhosis (F4), and passage from one stage to another is considered to demonstrate significant variation, likely to impact prognosis. However, liver biopsy is painful. It can only analyze a very small proportion of liver volume (1/50,000), whereas the distribution of fibrosis is generally heterogeneous. Above all, biopsy is not devoid of risks, primarily hemorrhage, which can sometimes be severe or even fatal. In line with current recommendations, clinical-biological algorithms, as well as ultrasound elastography or MRI, are used to assess the risk of fibrosis and the value of a liver biopsy. Generally speaking, these tests have the advantage of very good negative predictive values, making it possible to exclude the possibility of significant fibrosis in a large proportion of patients. However, their positive predictive values are weaker, even when these tests are combined. Above all, they do not allow us to follow the evolution of the fibrosis stage over time. This is why liver biopsies remain indispensable for determining the stage and severity of hepatic fibrosis and monitoring its evolution. It is therefore essential to develop more precise, non-invasive methods for accurately assessing the extent of liver fibrosis. This is the objective of the FreSH national cohort, which uses conventional biological techniques and in which our patients will also be included.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a very difficult public health problem in the world. Patients often experience the trilogy of "hepatitis-cirrhosis-liver cancer". Patients with decompensated cirrhosis may develop a variety of complications, such as portal hypertension, hypersplenism, esophageal and gastric variceal bleeding, ascites, spontaneous peritonitis, hepatic encephalopathy, etc. Liver transplantation is the only way to cure hepatitis B cirrhosis. However, the shortage of liver donors still severely limits its development. In 2015, Line and others proposed a new surgical method, namely resection and partial liver segment 2-3 transplantation with delayed total hepatectomy (RAPID). This surgery innovatively combines auxiliary liver transplantation and ALLPS surgery, which can greatly alleviate the problem of liver donor shortage and improve the overall prognosis of the above-mentioned patients. Our center has designed the Sequential Adult Left Lateral Liver Transplantation (SALT) procedure based on the principles of RAPID surgery and the characteristics of patients with cirrhosis. Compared with RAPID surgery, SALT surgery can dynamically monitor and regulate the blood flow of the residual liver and transplanted liver, reducing the risk caused by portal hypertension. This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of SALT in the treatment of post-hepatitis B cirrhosis.
This study is aim to compare ROTEM and TEG guided coagulopathy correction in cirrhosis with non- variceal bleed.There are no other study in literature to compare this two group in cirrhosis with non-variceal bleed.This study will also assess the volume of blood product transfused with this two groups and it will compare among two groups.This will lessen the blood product transfusion and risk of transfusion relatedated complication.