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Appendicitis clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02714023 Completed - Acute Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Water And Saline Head-to-head In The Blinded Evaluation Study Trial

WASHITBEST
Start date: October 10, 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Patients who are diagnosed with acute appendicitis consented and then randomized into two arms of the trial. In one arm, patients receive irrigation of the abdomen during surgery with normal saline, or salt water. In the other arm, patients receive irrigation of the abdomen during surgery with sterile water. Sometimes patients receive no irrigation if none is determined to be needed at the time of operation by the surgeon. We then followed patients after surgery for 30 days. The hypothesis of this study was that the use of sterile water as irrigation fluid during surgery in patients who have acute appendicitis will decrease the chance of a post-operative abscess or infection.

NCT ID: NCT02711449 Completed - Clinical trials for Suspected Appendicitis

Preoperative Methylprednisolone to Patients Suspected of Appendicitis Undergoing Laparoscopy

Start date: April 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

To test whether 125 mg preoperative methylprednisolone intravenously can reduce postoperative pain after laparoscopy for suspected appendicitis and to test whether preoperative methylprednisolone can reduce postoperative fatigue, increase quality of sleep, reduce nausea or vomiting, reduce duration of convalescence and increase overall quality of recovery after laparoscopy for suspected appendicitis.

NCT ID: NCT02687464 Completed - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Appendectomy Versus Non-Operative Treatment For Acute Non-Perforated Appendicitis in Children

APPY
Start date: January 20, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Rationale and Aim: The standard treatment for acute appendicitis in children is appendectomy. An increasing body of evidence from the adult literature suggests that acute appendicitis may be treated effectively with antibiotics alone, avoiding the need for surgery. The aim of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of non-operative treatment of acute appendicitis in children. Study design: Pragmatic, parallel-group, unmasked, non-inferiority multicentre randomized controlled trial (RCT). Patient allocation: Children will be randomly allocated (age 5-16 years) with a diagnosis of acute appendicitis to either laparoscopic appendectomy or treatment with antibiotics. Randomization will be performed using stratification to ensure equal distribution between groups of presenting clinical and demographic features that may influence outcome including gender, duration of symptoms and center. Interventions: One group of children will undergo laparoscopic appendectomy that is the current standard treatment for children with acute appendicitis. The other group will be treated with intravenous antibiotics. A treatment pathway specifically designed for this study will be used. Primary Outcome: To be meaningful to parents of, and clinicians treating, children with acute appendicitis, the primary outcome is treatment failure defined as: (i) any additional intervention related to appendicitis requiring general anesthesia within 1 year of randomization (including recurrence of appendicitis after non-operative treatment, which we will treat with appendectomy) or (ii) negative appendectomy. Secondary outcomes are: (i) complications; (ii) time to discharge following randomization; (iii) number and duration of hospital admissions. Sample size and data analysis: The proposed RCT has a 20% non-inferiority margin to test the null hypothesis that treatment with antibiotics is inferior to appendectomy. Based on data from collaborating centers and a pilot study that we have performed, we expect recruitment of 978 children in total (90% power) over 19 months allowing for drop out. Follow-up will be for 12 months.

NCT ID: NCT02673528 Completed - Acute Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Laparoscopic Assisted or Total Laparoscopic Appendectomy

Start date: January 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Acute appendicitis (AA), is a common intra-abdominal surgical pathology with the overall incidence of approximately 7% and mortality of 0.2-0.8%. Treatment of choice is the surgical removal of the inflamed appendix by using open or laparoscopic appendectomy. Following laparoscopic appendectomy (LA) proved to be a feasible and at least as safe as the corresponding open procedure, it has rapidly gained worldwide acceptance. The traditional approach to LA uses three ports. Over the past decade, successful attempts to perform the procedure with fewer ports have been reported. The authors' primary objectives were to 1) identify a simple, safe and feasible way to perform laparoscopic appendectomy in patients with uncomplicated acute appendicitis. 2) determine the health related quality of life of the patients and calculate the cost per quality adjusted life years (QALYs) gained after the procedures (LAA and TLA). 3) Purpose a surgical algorithm when approaching to acute appendicitis with the consideration of quality of health and cost.

NCT ID: NCT02664220 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute, Perforated Appendicitis

Dilute Povidone-iodine Irrigation vs No Irrigation for Children With Acute, Perforated Appendicitis

Start date: April 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this study is to compare the efficacy of PVI irrigation to no irrigation for decreasing postoperative intra-abdominal abscesses in children with perforated appendicitis. Additionally, this study aims to verify the safety profile of dilute PVI for intra-abdominal irrigation.

NCT ID: NCT02633735 Completed - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

EHR-based Decision Support for Pediatric Acute Abdominal Pain in Emergency Care

Appy-CDS
Start date: June 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Although appendicitis is the most common surgical emergency in children, its diagnosis remains a challenge and thus, emergency department (ED) providers increasingly rely on computed tomography to distinguish appendicitis from other conditions. This project (a) uses electronic health record (EHR) technology to deliver patient-specific clinical decision support to ED providers at the point of care, (b) assesses the impact of this intervention on the use of diagnostic imaging and clinical outcomes, and (c) assesses the impact of the intervention on the costs of care delivered. This innovative project will be a template for extending EHR-based clinical decision support to other domains of emergency care to ultimately improve a broad range of pediatric acute care outcomes. The proposed intervention, referred to as appy-CDS, is specifically designed for widespread use in EDs and could reduce reliance on advanced diagnostic imaging for pediatric and adolescent patients with acute abdominal pain while maintaining or improving clinical outcomes. Investigators aim to develop and implement an interactive, evidence-based clinical decision support tool to optimize care for children and adolescents presenting to a general or non-pediatric ED with acute abdominal pain.

NCT ID: NCT02625987 Completed - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Appendicectomy Skin Closure Technique: Changing Paradigms (ASC)

ASC
Start date: April 2015
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

To compare the results associated with two different skin closure techniques in open appendectomy. 200 patients were included after acute appendicitis diagnosis in emergency department. They were grouped randomly into two groups: patients who would receive skin closure with skin closure by an unique absorbable intradermic stitch (Group A) and another that would receive a habitual technique consistent in non absorbable separated stitches (Group B). General characteristics like gender, age, body mass index (IMC), comorbidities and allergies were registered. Days of evolution (DOE) until surgery, use of antibiotics previously, complicated or uncomplicated appendicitis, surgery time and wound complications like skin infection, dehiscence, seroma or abscess were registered in each case too,

NCT ID: NCT02580487 Completed - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

Perioperative Pain Management of Pediatric Appendectomy Patients

umpikipu
Start date: January 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Acute appendicitis is the most common illness that brings pediatric patients to the hospital for surgical treatment. Abdominal pain is the symptom because of which the patients go to the hospital. Some patients have severe pain and need analgesics before the final diagnosis and before surgery. After surgery most patient experience pain and at least 80 % of the patients need postoperative pain medication. For two decades there has been a clinical guideline for pain management in Kuopio University Hospital (KUH). The investigators aim was to evaluate how well the pain management for pediatric patient works in clinical practice.

NCT ID: NCT02556983 Completed - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

CT Dose Simulation Study for Appendicitis

Start date: August 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The study will explore CT radiation dose as low as reasonably achievable in diagnosing acute appendicitis, by using of dose simulation technique and iterative reconstruction.

NCT ID: NCT02533869 Completed - Appendicitis Clinical Trials

The Optimization of a Low-dose Computed Tomography Protocol in Patients With Suspected Uncomplicated Acute Appendicitis

OPTICAP
Start date: July 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study focuses on the use of contrast enhanced low-dose CT imaging as a modality to differentiate between uncomplicated and complicated acute appendicitis. Differentiation between the two forms of acute appendicitis is important because according to recent studies their treatment differs. Complicated forms are still treated operatively, while uncomplicated forms can be treated conservatively with antibiotics. In the initial phase of the study, several optimized CT protocols will be created with a phantom model. The two best performing models will be selected for the second phase of the study, in which patients presenting with suspected acute appendicitis will be imaged with the two protocols. All patients participating in the study will be treated operatively, primarily with a laparoscopic appendectomy. Thus histological confirmation for the diagnosis can be achieved and compared with the CT images. The goal of this study is to optimize a well-performing low-dose CT imaging protocol to use in the diagnosis of uncomplicated acute appendicitis.