View clinical trials related to Colitis.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the Chinese prescription on Ulcerative Colitis.
A prospective, randomized trial to determine indigo carmine dye spraying and narrow band imaging (NBI) of colonic mucosa to detect dysplasia in ulcerative colitis (UC). Confocal laser microscopy may be beneficial in the further assessment of abnormalities identified by these methods.
Subjects must be 18 years old and older, have diarrhea and microscopic colitis. Pregnant or nursing females are excluded. They can't have other untreated diarrheal conditions. Subjects will receive medication for 8 weeks, followed by sigmoidoscopy with biopsies. The subjects will be monitored weekly. A pathologist will review pre and post treatment biopsies. Subjects that show improvement will be followed for 4 weeks post medication.
This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled study to assess the beneficial effects of food supplementation with VSL#3 as a support to standard pharmaceutical therapy in patients affected by mild to moderate active ulcerative colitis.
study to investigate the safety and efficacy properties of PF-00547659 in patients with active ulcerative colitis
For patients with ulcerative colitis, eligible for surgical treatment, which restorative surgical procedure: the standard ileo pouch anal anastomosis or the alternative ileo neo rectal anastomosis is the best in terms of complications, functional outcome and health status and quality of life.
This is a study of the electronical dosing tool MedicPen and it's qualities with regards to user friendliness and medication compliance.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and the tolerability of oral parnaparin sodium (210mg), administered in extended-release tablets identified as CB-01-05-MMX™.
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy and safety of adalimumab in Japanese subjects with moderately to severely active ulcerative colitis (UC).
The primary endpoint of the study will be to compare the accuracy of two procedures (FICE with target biopsies only, versus conventional white light colonoscopy with recommended targeted and random biopsies) in the endoscopic surveillance of patient with long-standing UC. Accuracy will be measured based on the number of patients with confirmed neoplasia using each technique. The combined histological outcome following the two procedures will represent the gold-standard diagnosis for each patient. Secondary outcomes will be the number of patients with false-positive findings, the number of neoplastic lesions detected, the number of false-positive lesions per patient for each technique and the total time required for each procedure.