View clinical trials related to Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage.
Filter by:We have developed a new reliable, easy and reproducible clinical and biological score to select patients presenting to the emergency department with upper GI bleeding and at high risk of developing complications in order to plan an adequate management. This score was compared to the Glasgow-Blatchford score and showed better results in predicting rebleeding, the need for hemostasis therapy and any complications at day 30 including mortality. In a second step and as an objective of this study, it is necessary to perform an external validation of this score in different emergency departments.
Guided by clinical problems, this study focused on the problems encountered in clinical practice, with the interventional treatment of emergency gastrointestinal bleeding as the breakthrough point, and focused on the dilemma of treatment selection for patients with negative angiography in gastrointestinal bleeding. At present, there is no report on relevant clinical and basic research on the selection of treatment strategies for patients with negative ANVUGIB angiography. Whether prophylactic arterial embolization can benefit patients and whether it can reduce mortality is an urgent clinical problem to be solved.
Despite advances in gastrointestinal endoscopy and pharmaceuticals, gastrointestinal bleeding is still a significant emergency disease with a high mortality rate of 1.9-5 per 100 people due to excessive bleeding and shock. There are several indicators using pulse rate, blood pressure, hemoglobin, etc. to select patients who require endoscopic intervention, or hospitalization, but these are inaccurate and with a high false-positive rate and low specificity at 35-40%. Therefore, tests with high diagnostic accuracy for gastrointestinal bleeding patients are required and findings specific biomarkers for gastrointestinal bleeding are of great importance.
In the field of pediatric gastroenterology, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy has established itself as a diagnostic and therapeutic tool. In order to increase patient tolerance during this procedure, deep sedation is essential. Children are at a higher risk of serious adverse effects from procedural sedation; thus, their safety is a primary issue throughout this procedure. Multiple studies have been done to find the ideal method for procedural sedation in terms of ease of administration, quality, safety of sedation and recovery profile, but the consensus seems lacking. In this study we will compare between nasal inhalation of sevoflurane versus intravenous ketamine, midazolam and propofol for pediatrics undergoing upper gastrointestinal endoscopy.
Currently, hemorrhage remains the most common postoperative complication in patients with colon polyps, with an incidence of approximately 1.5%. The main reasons for postoperative hemorrhage are: the patient's own condition, the nature of the polyp and the operation. The number of patients treated for colon polyps has increased, postoperative care is confusing, medical resources are wasted, and the time span for postoperative diet recovery is large. However, studies on the effect of postoperative dietary recovery timing on postoperative polyp bleeding are rare.
This project aims to collect the exhaled breath of patients with acute upper gastrointestinal bleeding clinically, divide them into large, small and no bleeding groups according to the results of gastroscopy, analyze the characteristics of volatile organic compound components in exhaled breath, construct a discriminant model, and then analyze the sensitivity and specificity, and the target sensitivity and specificity reach more than 0.7, and formulate diagnostic criteria.
Bleedings in the upper digestive tract are common. Usually, laboratory and clinical parameters are considered to establish a suspicion for a bleeding in the digestive tract and to estimate urgency of the situation. If these parameters suggest the presence of a bleeding in the digestive tract, endoscopies are often performed to further investigate a patient's status. The above-mentioned laboratory and clinical parameters are sometimes not specific enough to reliably identify a bleeding in the upper digestive tract. The HemoPill acute is capsule device, that has a built in sensor that detects blood in the upper digestive tract. This information is valuable for the medical personnel and complements the information that is obtained from other laboratory or clinical tests
Bipolar hemostatic forceps will be tested against standard therapy in active, non-variceal, upper gastrointestinal bleeding by a prospective, randomized trial
PANTHER-GI Pilot Study will assess the feasibility of a full-scale multicentre cohort management study evaluating the safety of a standardized strategy for resuming direct oral anticoagulants (DOACs) after major DOAC-related gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding among patients at moderate to high risk of re-bleeding and thrombosis. A parallel registry will assess whether eligible patients who are not enrolled in the PANTHER-GI Pilot Study are systematically different than enrolled patients and to explore barriers to enrolment.
Gastrointestinal Emergency Surgery: Evaluation of Morbidity and Mortality