View clinical trials related to Dyspepsia.
Filter by:The goal of this clinical trial is to assess ginger's effect on patients with functional dyspepsia. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: 1. Does ginger intake improve functional dyspepsia symptoms? 2. Does ginger intake decrease the body fat content among patients with functional dyspepsia? Dyspepsia patients will be asked to take 540 mg of ginger capsule twice a day. Researchers will assess if there is an improvement in the symptoms of the disease and the fat content. [ to see if gingers effect.
Researchers are looking for a better way to treat people who have heartburn, indigestion, and problems due to excessive stomach acid. These are common problems which can affect daily life and disturb sleep during the night-time. Heartburn is the burning sensation or pain in the chest which occurs when stomach acid rises up in the food pipe (esophagus). Calcium carbonate tablets are used to treat heartburn, indigestion, and related digestive problems. Calcium carbonate works by neutralizing the excess acid in the stomach. The study treatment is a new bi-layer calcium carbonate tablet that has two layers. One layer quickly releases calcium carbonate aimed to provide quick relief (called immediate release) while the other layer releases calcium carbonate slowly to make the relief last longer (called sustained release). In this study, bi-layer calcium carbonate tablets will be given to healthy men for the first time. This study will provide information on how the new bi-layer tablet works inside the body. The main purpose of this study is to learn about how the new bi-layer calcium carbonate tablet changes the average acidity levels (measured using pH) compared to the standard calcium carbonate tablet during the night-time. For this, researchers will measure the acidity levels in the upper part of the stomach at regular intervals during the night-time. The participants will be randomly (by chance) assigned to one of two treatment groups: Participants in the first group will take the treatments at night. Participants in the second group will take the treatments during the day. All participants in both groups will take 2 bi-layer tablets and 2 standard tablets after a meal with a gap of 6 to 8 days between treatments. However, in each group, half the participants will receive the bi-layer tablets first while the other half will receive the standard tablets first. Each participant will be in the study for around 52 days with up to 4 visits to the study site. This includes: 1. visit about 28 days before the treatment starts during which the doctors will confirm that the participant can take part in the study 2. visits for treatment with a gap of 6-8 days between each treatment, and 1 visit 7 to 14 days after the treatment ends during which the doctors will monitor the participants' health. During the study, the doctors and their study team will: check participants' overall health by performing tests such as blood and urine tests, and check heart health using an electrocardiogram (ECG) take images of the stomach at different times after taking the treatment measure acidity level (pH) using a device called pH probe that is inserted into the upper part of the stomach ask the participants questions about how easy it is to take the study treatment ask the participants what adverse events they are having. An adverse event is any medical problem that a participant has during a study. Doctors keep track of all adverse events, irrespective of whether they think it is related to the study treatment, or not. As this study is conducted in healthy men who will not gain any benefit from this treatment, access to the study treatment after the study is not planned.
The aim of this study is to compare intravenous famotidine, an H2 receptor antagonist, and Maalox/ Mylanta, an oral antacid, in treatment of dyspepsia in the emergency department. The goal of this study is to reduce patients' pain based on the verbal numerical pain scale. The anticipated outcome is for pain levels in both groups to decrease. It is expected that antacids will improve symptoms more quickly and to a greater degree within an hour of taking medication based on the results of similar studies.
The study is conducted in patients with functional dyspepsia or chronic gastritis. The purpose of this study is to: - assess whether the dose of Itopride Hydrochloride 150 mg extended release tablets, taken once daily has a similar effect on gastrointestinal symptoms caused by gastric dysmotility and delayed gastric emptying, like bloating sensation, early satiety, postprandial fullness, upper abdominal pain or discomfort, anorexia, heartburn, nausea and vomiting in functional (non-ulcer) dyspepsia or chronic gastritis, as Itopride Hydrochloride 50 mg film coated tablets administered thrice a day. - investigate assessment of the treatment provided to each participant. - monitor safety and tolerability of Itopride Hydrochloride 150 mg extended release tablets, taken once daily before one of the main meals (preferably same meal throughout the treatment) and Itopride Hydrochloride 50 mg film coated tablets thrice daily before meals.
The goal of this study is to investigate the mechanisms of impaired gastric accommodation and emptying, dysfunctional duodenum, and micro-inflammation using novel imaging techniques of SPECT/CT, gastric emptying scintigraphy, MRI, high-resolution manometry, and inflammatory biomarkers, as well as to validate these mechanisms using a therapeutic trial of neuromodulator (mirtazapine) in functional dyspepsia (FD) and health. The main objective[s] it aims to answer are: - to investigate impaired gastric accommodation through SPECT/CT imaging and high-resolution manometry findings of the stomach fundus. - to investigate impaired gastric emptying through gastric emptying scintigraphy - to investigate for a dysfunctional duodenum through MRI imaging of the duodenum. - to investigate micro-inflammation through SPECT/CT standard uptake value (SUV), inflammatory biomarkers (eosinophils, mast cells, IL-6, IL-10) and mucosal barrier marker (E-cadherin). - to investigate if a therapeutic trial of a neuromodulator agent, mirtazapine, ameliorates symptoms of FD through improvement in impaired gastric accommodation. For objectives 1-4, FD patients and healthy volunteers will be consecutively recruited, and all will undergo SPECT/CT, MRI, high-resolution manometry and biomarkers, and data acquired from these tests will be analyzed. For objective 5, the enrolled participants who did all baseline tests/markers are given mirtazapine for four weeks, and all tests/markers, except biomarkers and MRI, are repeated at the end of the trial
This study aims at evaluating efficacy and safety of Vonorazon and amoxicillin dual therapy versus bismuth-containing quadruple Therapy(bismuth#esomeprazole#tetracycline and furazolidone) in H. pylori rescue therapy. It is hypothesized that Vonorazon and amoxicillin dual therapy is non-inferior to bismuth-containing quadruple Therapy. Patients with confirmed failure of H. pylori eradication will be randomized to one of the treatments described above. At week 6 follow-up visits, a urea breath test#rapid urease test or helicobacter pylori stool antigen test will be performed to confirm eradication.
Background. Abdominal distention is produced by an abnormal somatic postural tone. The authors developed an original biofeedback technique based on electromyography-guided control of abdominothoracic muscular activity. In a randomized, placebo-controlled trial the authors demonstrated the superiority of biofeedback over placebo for the treatment of abdominal distention. However, the technique is technically complex and unpractical. Aim. To prove the efficacy of a non-instrumental biofeedback technique for the treatment of abdominal distension. Selection criteria. Visible abdominal distension after meal ingestion; patients are able to identify the offending meal. Intervention. Patients will be randomized into biofeedback in placebo groups. Three sessions of either biofeedback or placebo intervention will be performed during the first 3 weeks of the intervention period. Biofeedback: patients will be taught to control abdominal and thoracic muscular activity by providing instructions using an original video support. Patients will be instructed to perform the same exercises before and after breakfast, lunch and dinner during the 4-week intervention period. Placebo: sham measurements of abdominal and thoracic motion will be performed, and a pill of placebo containing 0.21 g glucose will be administered; patients will be instructed to take a pill of placebo before breakfast, lunch and dinner during the 4-week intervention period.
Dyspepsia is a commonly encountered clinical condition in Dutch general practice, which is often treated through the prescription of acid-reducing medication (ARM). However, recent studies indicate that the majority of chronic ARM users lack an indication for their use and that their long-term use is associated with adverse outcomes. A patient-focussed educational intervention was developed aiming to reduce low-value (chronic) use of ARM. This study is a randomized controlled study, evaluating its effect on the low-value chronic prescription of ARM using data from a subset of practices from the Nivel Primary Care Database. The intervention involves distributing an educational waiting room posters and flyers informing both patients and general practitioners (GPs) regarding the appropriate indications for prescription of an ARM for dyspepsia, which also referred to an online decision aid. The interventions' effect is evaluated through calculation of the odds ratio of a patient receiving a low-value chronic ARM prescription over the second half of 2021 and 2022 (i.e. pre-intervention vs. post-intervention).
Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are frequently prescribed for 30 days but taken infinitely. PPIs belong to the most often inappropriate medicines (PIMs). Correct intake of medicines (named adherence) can be supported by digital devices such as smartphone applications. The goal of this interventional study is to test the feasibility of an app-based treatment support provided by community pharmacists in patients prescribed a short-term PPI (30 days). The intervention consists in tracking medication intake, symptom course and well-being over the treatment duration of 30 days with the mednet app on patients' personal smartphones.
This is a comprehensive pathophysiological study assessing various gastric functions in patients with diabetes mellitus. The investigators aim to examine the stomach with various measurement devices to gain information about its different functions and malfunctions. After the initial measurements, the examinations will be repeated after a year in each patient. Changes in the measurement values will be examined and their relations to each other and to the overall health of the patients will be investigated. For example it is hypothesised that diabetic patients also suffering from functional dyspepsia or gastroparesis will also show some changes in the function of the pyloric muscle.