View clinical trials related to Common Bile Duct Stricture.
Filter by:The main aim of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effects of dexamethasone on common bile duct cannulation time during endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) in patients with biliary pathologies. The study will also study the effects of dexamethasone on total procedure time and total fluoroscopy time during ERCP. Participants will be divided into two groups, treatment group and placebo group. Patients in treatment group will receive dexamethasone and those in placebo group will be given normal saline before undergoing ERCP. The results in both groups will be compared to determine the effects of dexamethasone.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of the various types of stents available for biliary drainage in patients with neoplastic stenosis of the common bile duct and to evaluate the adherence to the current guidelines available.
If surgical treatment is not possible in patients with malignant obstruction in the common bile duct, placing metal stents using endoscopy is a standardized treatment to resolve biliary obstruction. The metal stent is located in the bile duct to cover the stenotic portion by malignant tumors. The lower end of the metal stent can be located inside the common bile duct above the major ampulla or in the duodenum through the major ampulla. These two procedures with supra- or trans-papillary stents are currently being performed in general clinical practices, depending on the preference of the endoscopists. Until now, the comparison of the clinical results of the two procedures has been scarcely studied, and there is no prospective study yet. Therefore, researchers aim to compare the clinical results of two stent procedures through prospective randomized controlled studies.
The current standard of care for benign bile duct strictures involves placement of multiple plastic stents under endoscopic and fluoroscopic guidance to progressively dilate or stretch it open. This approach necessitates multiple procedures which may extend over one year before the stricture is adequately dilated. The investigators propose a study comparing the standard approach of plastic stenting with the use of newer, fully coated metallic stents which are self-expandable, thereby permitting successful dilation of benign bile duct strictures with fewer procedures.