View clinical trials related to Abdominal Pain.
Filter by:In children and adolescents (older than 6 years in age) who arrive in the pediatric emergency department because they have been having 5 days or less of abdominal pain (possible appendicitis), will patients who are treated with ketorolac get just as much pain relief as those patients treated with morphine? To answer this research question, we will need a large number of patients in a study. To ensure we have enough patients, we must include many hospitals in different cities and provinces in the same study. Before doing this, though, we must first test a smaller version of the study in our center at McMaster Children's hosptial. The goal of doing this at McMaster first is to make sure or understand: 1. We can enroll enough people in our study over 1 year 2. We can make sure that all the information we collect from patients is complete and nothing is missing 3. Reasons behind why people don't want to participate in the study 4. How satisfied patients and their caregivers were with the study
In children 7-12 years of age with functional abdominal pain (n=42) determine: Aim 1 - To examine and characterize the threshold of the exposure (PK) vs. response (PD) relationship of PMO (menthol) Aim 2 - PD of PMO as assessed by: 1. Microbiome composition (16S RNA sequencing) 2. Transit rate/contractile activity (using the SmartPill®) Aim 3 - Evaluate the potential association between PD response and clinical symptoms (abdominal pain and stooling pattern via validated diary), psychosocial distress (anxiety, depression, somatization), and characterize potential side effects (questionnaire)
- Laparoscopic surgeries are becoming more attractive because of early recovery. However, post-laparoscopic shoulder and upper abdominal pain may cause more discomfort to the patient than the pain at the incision site - Many strategies have been attempted, such as the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; however, the effect is limited, and there are no reliable methods available yet. - Recently, some techniques are introduced that can potentially alleviate various types of pain through different mechanisms in patients after laparoscopic surgery such as low-pressure pneumoperitoneum, intraperitoneal normal saline infusion, and pulmonary recruitment maneuvers. - the investigators conduct this randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of different strategies on reducing the intensity of post-laparoscopic shoulder and abdominal pain in patients undergoing laparoscopic gynecologic surgeries.
This trial will investigate the potential of a bioactive peptide to reduce symptoms of digestive discomfort in a generally healthy elderly population. Participants will consume the bioactive peptide for 12 weeks and various measures indicating an improvement in health and well being will be taken throughout the trial. It is believed that consumption of the study product will reduce the severity of digestive discomfort, reduce chronic inflammation, improve blood glucose metabolism and improve physical performance.
This is a prospective, double-blind, randomized, sham-controlled pilot study evaluating the efficacy of percutaneous electrical nerve field stimulation for the treatment of adult patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
Emergency room patients referred for esophago-gastro-duodenoscopy (EGD) often have many possible causes for their symptoms. These patients inevitably undergo further testing if EGD is inconclusive, which adds costs and prolongs emergency room length of stay (LOS).EUS has traditionally been used after EGD for a myriad of reasons that no longer apply. The investigators therefore propose a prospective pilot study to determine whether adding primary EUS to EGD can reduce LOS and resource utilisation in emergency room patients referred for EGD.
Intravenous lidocaine will be given at a dose of 2 mg/kg intravenously to patients in the emergency department with a diagnosis of acute abdominal pain. Its efficacy will be compared to 1 mg of intravenous hydromorphone, with a primary endpoint of mean improvement of pain at 90 minutes.
To improve the safety of diagnosis and therapy for a set of conditions and undifferentiated symptoms for hospitalized patients, the investigators will employ a set of methods and tools from the disciplines of systems engineering, human factors, quality improvement,and data analytics to thoroughly analyze the problem, design and develop potential solutions that leverage existing current technological infrastructure, and implement and evaluate the final interventions. The investigators will engage the interdisciplinary care team and patient (or their caregivers) to ensure treatment trajectories match the anticipated course for working diagnoses (or symptoms), and whether they are in line with patient and clinician expectations. The investigators will use an Interrupted time series (ITS) design to assess impact on diagnostic errors that lead to patient harm. The investigators will perform quantitative and qualitative evaluations using implementation science principles to understand if the interventions worked, and why or why not.
cross sectional study to detect frequency of functional gastrointestinal disorders among schhol aged children complaining of recurrent abdominal pain
The purpose of this research study is to see if a six-week yoga program delivered online/virtually via Zoom, reduces abdominal pain in people with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). This study also looks at whether the yoga program changes the composition of microorganisms in the gut and their metabolites, and compares the program in people with IBS versus healthy people (also known as "healthy controls" or "HC"). People in this study are randomized (like flipping a coin) to one of two conditions: half of the people attend the online/virtual private yoga program delivered via Zoom for the first six-weeks, and half of the people wait for six-weeks and then attend the online/virtual private yoga program for six-weeks. The hypothesis of this study is that the practice of yoga induces shifts in the gut microbiota and microbial-derived metabolites, which will correlate with diminished abdominal pain.