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Colitis, Ischemic clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04662268 Completed - Ischemic Colitis Clinical Trials

Assessment of a Composite Prognostic Score to Predict Severe Forms of Ischemic Colitis

Start date: January 1, 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Our objective is to determine a prognostic score including CT, clinical and biological criteria predicting the serious (death / surgery) or non-serious (medical treatment) evolution of ischemic colitis and therefore possibly modify the therapeutic management (propose surgical treatment for a severe form based on prognostic score).

NCT ID: NCT01078324 Completed - Colitis, Ischemic Clinical Trials

Study of Ischemic Colitis Compared to Other Diagnoses in Patients With Lower Gastrointestinal Bleeding

Start date: December 1997
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

The purpose of this study is to study the demographic,laboratory,endoscopic, and outcomes of ischemic colitis patient presented with severe lower gastrointestinal bleeding compared to other diagnoses.

NCT ID: NCT00534131 Completed - Colitis, Ulcerative Clinical Trials

Anterior Perineal Plane for Ultra Low Anterior Resection of the Rectum

APPEAR
Start date: April 1, 2004
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Anal sphincter preserving operations are now commonplace for both cancer and non-cancerous rectal diseases. However, this has not always been the case and this development has been facilitated by the invention of circular stapling instruments, which allow the bowel to be reconnected to the anal sphincters, where it would almost be impossible to do so manually. Nevertheless, some patients still require a permanent ostomy, as even with stapling devices ultra low joins of the bowel and sphincter muscles cannot always be performed by a conventional surgery. Therefore, a variety of alternative techniques have been proposed to avoid a permanent ostomy, but these have not become widespread due to the technical difficulty in performing them, their failure to completely eradicate rectal disease, and the damage they inflict upon the anal sphincters resulting in poor bowel function after surgery. The ideal ultra low sphincter preserving operation should remove the rectal disease entirely, allow the small or large bowel to be safely joined to the anal sphincters under direct vision, and retain the sphincter mechanism in its entirety. We propose such a technique that we term the APPEAR procedure, which approaches the lower third of the rectum via an incision between the scrotum or vagina, and the anal sphincters. This procedure preserves sphincter integrity, and allows either a stapled or manual join of the bowel to the sphincter mechanism, under direct vision. This trial is being conducted as a pilot study, with the procedure only offered to patients for whom a conventional sphincter saving procedure was technically impossible, or contraindicated.