Clinical Trials Logo

Bowel Preparation Solutions clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Bowel Preparation Solutions.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT04474002 Recruiting - Colonoscopy Clinical Trials

Efficacy, Tolerance and Safety of Split Dose Bowel Preparation for Colonoscopy: 4L Polyethylene Glycol (PEG) Versus 1L Polyethylene Glycol Plus Sodium Picosulfate-magnesium Citrate (SPMC)

Start date: December 7, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

4L split dose PEG is the gold standard for bowel preparation, however it comes with poor tolerability and poor compliance. Combination of PEG with different agent is useful in reducing total volume, improving compliance and tolerance of patient. The objective of this study is to demonstrate that combination bowel preparation, PEG plus SPMC solution, has similar efficacy and safety profile whereas with a better tolerance when compared to large volume PEG.

NCT ID: NCT01627171 Recruiting - Endoscopy Clinical Trials

Colonoscopy Preparation Optimization for INpatients- COIN Study

COIN
Start date: September 2012
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Colonoscopic examinations are performed routinely in hospitalized patients for a variety of indications. However, numerous limitations exist in hospitalized patients preventing an endoscopist from performing high quality examinations; possibly necessitating repeated procedures leading to increased cost and re-exposure to their inherent risks. One such prominent challenge lays in the adequacy of bowel cleansing. Inpatient status has been shown to be a predictor of poor bowel preparation as these patients are older, less mobile and have more co morbidities than the outpatient population. Currently, no standardized (or optimized) bowel preparation type or regimen for administration exists for the hospital inpatient population undergoing colonoscopy. Studies in the outpatient population have demonstrated that timing and choice of cathartic medication effects the cleanliness of the bowel preparation but there is no such clinical evidence for in-patients who receive whatever cathartic agent is on hospital formulary. The purpose of the study is compare efficacy, patient satisfaction, and adverse effects associated with low volume cathartic (Pico-Salax) to the current standard volume 4 liter (PEG-Lyte) and the effect of alternate timing of dosages.