View clinical trials related to Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
Filter by:assess the incidence of the entire spectrum of esophageal disorders and possible theories for overlap in IBS patients using different diagnostic modalities.
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is very common functional gastrointestinal disorder in daily gastrointestinal practice. Its etiology is multifactorial and incompletely understood. Different types of treatment have been trying but no single drug is effective for every patients. After the discovery of 5HT4(5 hydroxytryptamine-4) receptor and its effect on gastrointestinal motility, 5HT4 receptor agonist becoming a good therapeutic tool in different functional gastrointestinal disorder. Prucalopride is a selective 5HT4 agonist and it has proven benefit in chronic idiopathic constipation but there is not enough evidence that it is effective in constipation predominant IBS. Objective: To assess the efficacy of Prucalopride in constipation predominant IBS patients. Material & method: Consecutive patients of both sexes, age more than 18 years attended the outpatient department of Gastroenterology meeting the inclusion Criteria of IBS-C will be initially enrolled for the study. Their clinical history, examination & initial investigations report will be noted on the standard data sheet. Any alternative diagnosis if proven by clinical examination or laboratory investigation will be excluded from the study. Randomization into two groups (Prucalopride and placebo) will be performed by lottery. Patients will be randomly assigned to receive either Prucalopride 2 mg or placebo for 6 weeks. IBS symptoms will be assessed by IBS-SSS (symptom severity score) and IBS-QOL(quality of life) at the baseline, 2nd week and 6th week of treatment (end of treatment). Any adverse effect due to drugs will also be monitored by base line ECG, calculation of corrected QT interval and ECG monitoring (2 weeks and 6 weeks) during the course of treatment. Data analysis By SPSS. IBS-SSS and IBS-QOL instrument scores will be expressed as mean ± standard deviation. Statistical analysis will be done by paired and unpaired 't' test. P value <0.05 will be considered statistically significant. Ethical Consideration: Every ethical issue will be discussed with the patient regarding the study and informed written consent will be obtained. There will be no chance of disclosure of information that will have been harmful to the patients or others. Permission have been taken from the concerned departmental ethical committee as well as ethical review committee of BSMMU in order to carry out the study.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the effects of a specific Cognitive Behavioral treatment protocol for patients with IBS used in routine care at a gastroenterology unit in Stockholm. The research question is whether the treatment has the same effects in routine care as it has had in efficacy studies. The treatment is given by licenced psychologists (with CBT training) face-to-face in groups of 4-7 participants and lasts for ten sessions (ten weeks, normally).
Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (IBO) is a common functional condition due to excessive amounts of bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract. These bacteria ferment ingested food resulting in the production of hydrogen, methane, and carbon dioxide which subsequently can induce GI symptoms including abdominal pain, bloating, distention, diarrhea and constipation. Typically this condition is treated with antibiotics but for a portion of patients symptoms often recur. Recent work suggests that increased methane production may emanate from overgrowth of a specific type of archaebacteria, causing the aforementioned symptoms. However, no current therapies exist to treat this phenomenon. The investigators propose to trial the supplement Atrantil on patients with IMO in order to study the supplements impact on symptoms, quality of life, and methane levels.
The purpose of the study is investigate the effectiveness of Zemedy, a mobile application that enables the digital delivery of a CBT program to people with IBS.
This study aims to compare visceral rectal sensitivity and quality of life of 40 Irritable Bowel Syndrome women, with (20) and without sexual dysfunction (20). Both Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and sexual dysfunction (SD), decrease quality of life (QOL) separately, and only recently we have shown that quality of life decreases even more with both diseases. Thus, there is clinical evidence to search for a biological marker that explains this cumulative effect. Investigators will determine IBS using the Rome IV criteria, SD through the Female Sexual Function Index (FSFI) while and QOL through the Short Form-36 and the IBS-QOL. Visceral sensitivity will be evaluated by a barostat study: A small bag connected to a computer is placed in the rectum. This computer will insufflate air increasing the volume and simultaneously record the pressure inside the rectum; therefore investigators can simulate what happens when the stool reaches the rectum. The patient reports the first sensation, gas sensation, need to defecate and even pain. For patient protection the pressure will never exceed 50 mmHg and/or if any amount of pain is reported. To assess the effect of food on this visceral sensitivity, it is performed in 2 stages, fasting and 30 minutes after a standardized meal. The protocol will be carried out through 3 visits. First patients will be recruited; the diagnosis of IBS, SD, quality of life will be established and basic laboratory tests will be schedule before next visit. Second visit will be on day 7 of the menstrual cycle when investigators will carry out the barostat study and determination of blood´s sex hormones. The last visit is for the second barostat study on day 21 of the menstrual cycle with sex hormones measurement. This protocol will compare: Rectal pressure and volume for tone, first sensation, gas sensation, desire to defecate and pain, measure during fasting and postprandial periods in day 7 and 21 (estrogenic and progesterone phase) of the menstrual cycle. Other variables include (age, marital status, disease history, SF-36, IBS-QOL, etc.). This study aims to find a biological marker to explain the low QOL observed in daily clinical practice. This approach will allow us a more effective diagnosis and perhaps the creation of more effective therapeutic approaches to treat these patients. In the long term, we expect to establish the foundations of a patient-centered medicine with shared decision more effective in the gut brain axis disorders.
This is a prospective, clinical, multicentre study aimed to collect biological samples and study microbiota from subjects with Clostridium Difficile (CDI), subjects affected by Multi Drug Resistant Organisms (MDRO) infection, subjects with Chronic Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), subjects with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), subjects with Hepatic Encephalopathy and from healthy volunteers. Microbiota is a complex consortium of microorganisms, located at the mucosal level (in particular intestinal, oral and vaginal) having a key role in human health and in the onset of several diseases. Microbiota alterations have been found in several diseases (gastrointestinal, metabolic, renal, oncological, gynaecological) The study will allow to: - Provide biological samples (faeces, saliva, blood, urine) from healthy volunteers and patients to the first Italian microbiota biobank; - Study microorganisms using different in vitro and in vivo techniques; - Study the link between the microbiota and the disease. This study is part of the BIOMIS project (Project Code: ARS01_01220), presented as part of the "Avviso per la presentazione di progetti di ricerca industriale e sviluppo sperimentale nelle 12 aree di specializzazione individuate dal PNR 2015-2020" and admitted to funding under the National Operational Program "Ricerca e Innovazione" 2014-2020 by directorial decree of MIUR - Department for Higher Education and Research - n. 2298 of 12 September 2018. BIOMIS includes several clinical studies that enrol patients with different pathologies to collect and store biological samples and study microbiota.
The prevalence of migraine is higher in female patients with various intestinal diseases. An explanation could be that migraine is caused by a leaky gut, defined by increased intestinal permeability that permits particles to pass through the gastrointestinal wall. Probiotics, may be able to improve intestinal barrier function. OBJECTIVE: To test whether probiotics, as adjucnt therapy, can reduce incidence and severity of migraine attacks by reducing intestinal permeability.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether an online resource developed to aid health consumers in making health decisions and better support them to seek quality evidence before other evidence is effective in the context of inflammatory bowel disease and irritable bowel syndrome
Many patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) do not experience adequate symptom relief with current treatments. The pathophysiology of IBS is diverse, controversial and not completely understood. The next disruptive frontier would be to find a cure where the effect is predictable and lasting. The study groups phase 2 pilot trial was the first indication of a possible benefit from treating IBS with fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) (Number needed to treat only five) (Fecal microbiota transplantation versus placebo for moderate-to-severe irritable bowel syndrome: a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, single-centre trial he Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2018). Additional results from the same trial show that the treatment response may be predicted (unpublished data), and that the pathophysiologic mechanisms behind the treatment response also can be identified (Effects of fecal microbiota transplantation in subjects with irritable bowel syndrome are mirrored by changes in gut microbiome, Gut Microbes 2020). This study is the first phase 3 trial of FMT for IBS worldwide. The hypothesis of the trial is that donor FMT is more effective than placebo FMT in treating IBS, with little adverse events or complications. Patients ≥18 years with IBS are enrolled at five Norwegian Hospitals in this double blind randomized, placebo controlled, parallell-group multi center trial. Participants are randomized to FMT from a healthy donor (intervention group), or their own feces (placebo group). The primary outcome is the proportion of patients with ≥75 points decrease in the Irritable bowel Symptom Severity score 90 days after treatment.