View clinical trials related to Acute Mesenteric Ischemia.
Filter by:Retrospective population-based study on epidemiology of acute mesenteric ischemia in Estonia Study objective is to describe epidemiologic features in adult patients with acute mesenteric ischemia during years 2016-2020. Patients from all hospitals in Estonia are included.
The aim of the SURVIBIO study is to characterize accurate biomarkers for acute mesenteric ischemia, in particular at early stages. In the study, the development of biomarkers will be based on the analysis of human biological samples from patients and controls that will be conserved in a biological library. Samples will be analysed in the Laboratory for Vascular Translational Sciences (LVTS, Inserm U1148), in the Department of Biochemistry (Pr Puy, Dr Peoc'h), in Paris V university , in Imperial College of London (Pr Dumas), in Jacques Monod Institute and in Maastricht University Medical Center . The candidate markers will be determined according to an a priori method (form markers already described in the literature) and with no a priori strategy using -omics methods.
Acute mesenteric ischemia is a life-threatening condition characterized by high mortality if unrecognized early. This multicenter retrospective observational study will review the emergency departments's (ED) notes of all patients discharged from hospital with a diagnosis of acute mesenteric ischemia in 2014-2015 comparing it with those admitted to the ED for abdominal pain in the same timeframe.
In the FARAMIS study, we aim to investigate the longitudinal course of intestinal plasma fatty acid binding protein (i-FABP) in patients with acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) undergoing primary percutaneous angiographic intervention. The investigators postulate that patients with fully re-established intestinal blood flow and vital intestines will display a significant drop of plasmatic i-FABP within 24 hours, while patients requiring subsequent intestinal resection due to irreversible bowel necrosis will not. If true, patients requiring laparotomy and bowel resection could be identified and patients in whom angiographic intervention led to successful cure of disease would not be exposed to potentially perilous surgery.