View clinical trials related to Gas Bloat Syndrome.
Filter by:Symptoms of bloating, abdominal distension, and constipation are common in patients with cirrhosis. These symptoms may be explained by disease-associated effects in gastrointestinal physiology, as well as medication side-effects. The presence of these symptoms affect quality of life, as well as risk for encephalopathy. Misoprostol is a synthetic prostaglandin approved for the treatment prevention of NSAID-induced gastric ulcers. The drug also causes smooth muscle contraction in the gastrointestinal tract has been shown to improve colonic motility. This study aims to assess the efficacy of misoprostol for treating bloating, distension, and constipation in patients with cirrhosis. Study participants will receive misoprostol for a duration of three days. Participants will complete pre-intervention and post-intervention symptom questionnaires and low dose abdominal computed tomography (CT) scan. These measures will be used to assess subjective symptom scores and objective measurement of intestinal gas and colonic stool. Post-intervention measures will be compared to pre-intervention measures to assess improvement of symptoms.
A randomised clinical trial in a single centre.The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of kinesio taping and breathing exercises on pain management applied after benign gynecological abdominal operations. A total of 132 women, divided into 4 groups of 33 subjects each, were included.Women underwent gynecological abdominal operation were assigned to the groups randomly, depending on the application of two different methods of kinesio taping and breathing exercise.In randomization, a table of numbers was created, and an equal number of women were assigned to groups with four block patterns. Using kinesio taping and breathing exercise, 33 women were included in kinesio taping group (1st Group), 33 in breathing exercise group (2nd Group), and 33 in kinesio taping + breathing exercise group (3rd Group). No intervention was applied to the women in the control group (4th Group). Pain levels of women were evaluated with Visual Analog Scale (VAS) before and after administration of the interventions.