View clinical trials related to Diarrhea.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to determine if the use of prophylactic bismuth subsalicylate (BSS) has an effect on the acquisition of travelers' diarrhea (TD) or antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes in fecal samples among international travelers who departed from the United States to South East Asia, South Central Asia, or Africa. Our hypotheses will be tested using a double-blinded, placebo controlled randomized clinical trial with participants from a pre-travel health clinic in the United States.
This phase II trial studies how well isatuximab works in treating patients with primary amyloidosis that has come back or does not respond to treatment. Monoclonal antibodies, such as isatuximab, may interfere with the ability of cancer cells to grow and spread.
Accidental bowel leakage (fecal incontinence) increases in people who have diarrhea and sensations of urgency to have a bowel movement. Drugs such as loperamide (Imodium) that reduce diarrhea improve accidental bowel leakage, but loperamide has disadvantages: it is difficult to find a dose that does not cause constipation, and it does not reduce urge sensations. Eluxadoline is a new drug that is effective for reducing diarrhea, abdominal pain, and urgency in patients with irritable bowel syndrome, and it may be less likely than loperamide to cause severe constipation. Therefore, eluxadoline may help patients manage accidental bowel leakage caused by diarrhea. The chemical name for Viberzi® is eluxadoline. The primary aims of this study are to find out if eluxadoline at a dose of 100 mg orally twice a day will reduce the average number of days the patient has accidental bowel leakage, and to see if the rate of accidental bowel leakage increases when the patient stops taking eluxadoline. Additional goals are to find out if eluxadoline decreases diarrhea and urge sensations. This is a small (pilot) study to show whether eluxadoline is an effective way of treating accidental bowel leakage. If the study shows this, a larger study will be needed. There are three phases to this 12-week study: (1) A two-week run-in period to see if the patient meets the inclusion criteria. (2) Two months for treatment including one month on eluxadoline and one on placebo (sugar pills) twice a day. (3) A two-week follow-up to see what happens when you stop taking eluxadoline. To participate in the study, patients should be aged 18 or older. Patients with inflammatory bowel disease, anal fissures, or congenital malformations will be excluded. The primary outcome is the average number of days per week with any solid or liquid bowel accidents. Additional information includes: (1) Number of days per week the patient takes loperamide, (2) days per week with loose or watery stools, (3) days per week with moderate to strong urge sensations, and (4) questionnaires to measure the severity of accidental bowel leakage, quality of life, anxiety, and depression. There will be up to 38 patients in the study.
The purpose and primary objective of this study is to determine if there is an association between enteral tube feed (TF) osmolality and diarrhea in critically ill patients. The investigators hypothesize that the administration of a TF formulation with high osmolality will cause more diarrhea than a TF formulation with a lower osmolality.
Afatinib is an irreversible ErbB-family blocker with approved clinical activity in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with EGFR mutations. It has received regulatory approval for use as a treatment for patients with lung adenocarcinoma whose tumors harbour activating EGFR mutations within exons 18-21 of the EGFR receptor, or patients with lung squamous cell carcinoma whose disease progress after platinum-based doublet chemotherapy. However, diarrhea is the most commonly reported adverse events associated with afatinib treatment (> 90%). Although these events are generally mild to moderate in severity, diarrhea adversely affects the tolerability of cancer treatment, and in severe cases diarrhea has the potential to affect the efficacy of treatment due to poor compliance, or treatment interruption, or dosage reduction. Currently, no prophylactic measure was demonstrated efficaciously. Bacillus cereus is an aerobic spore-forming bacterium that is commonly found in soil. The efficacy of Bacillus cereus in the management of afatinib treatment-associated diarrhoea has not been extensively evaluated in clinical studies. This is a single-arm, single-institutional, phase II study evaluating the efficacy and safety of Bacillus cereus (Changfukang®) in the prevention of afatinib-associated diarrhea in NSCLC patients.
This is a prospective, open-label, multicenter, single-arm study evaluating the efficacy and safety of Racecadotril the treatment of children aged 3 to 60 months suffering from acute diarrhea
This a cluster randomised controlled trial (cRCT) to evaluate the effect of a novel food hygiene intervention on infant health.
Multicenter, open-label, controlled, randomized clinical study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Racecadotril in infants, children and adolescents with acute diarrhea
This study evaluates the efficacy of prophylaxis with oral vancomycin for preventing recurrent Clostridium difficile Infection (CDI) in patients who have experienced at least one CDI episode in the last 180 days and are receiving antibiotics for a non CDI condition. Participants will be randomized to receive either placebo or oral vancomycin in addition to their prescribed antibiotic therapy.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled clinical trial, in order to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Chinese Medicine JCM-16021 for diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome. All patients will be evaluated for study eligibility at Visits 1 (baseline) and 2 (2 weeks). On visit 2, patients who meet the criteria will be randomly assigned to receive 8-week treatment of either JCM-16021 Granules or JCM-16021 placebo Granules. The investigators, research assistants and participants are not aware of the treatment assignments throughout the study. Treatment codes will only be broken after the completion of study. The assessments at Visit 3 (4-week post treatment) and at visit 4 (end of 8-week treatment) are used to measure treatment response (i.e. changes from baseline). Assessment at visit 5 (end of 8-week follow up) is to determine any sustained response to treatment. All the visits will be carried out in HKBU and CUHK clinics.