View clinical trials related to Jaundice.
Filter by:Our study presents a detection model predicting a diagnosis of jaundice (clinical jaundice and occult jaundice) trained on prospective cohort data from slit-lamp photos and smartphone photos, demonstrating the model's validity and assisting clinical workers in identifying patient underlying hepatobiliary diseases.
This retrospective monocentric study aims at comparing multimodality endoscopic biliary drainage versus percutaneous radiologic biliary drainage in case of perihilar malignant obstruction. Data from patients admitted in the Nancy University Hospital, France, between january 2016 and march 2022 with jaundice and perihilar obstruction will be retrospectively collected.
Arteriopathy of the lower limbs (ALL) is defined by a decreased ankle perfusion pressure with a systolic pressure index (SPI) <0.9, and constitutes the most advanced situation in terms of cardiovascular prognosis with in 20 % of cases of lesions associated with the heart and / or coronary heart. The severity of ALL is linked to the risk of a cardiovascular event, hence the need for a hemodynamic evaluation which is mainly based on the measurement of SPI.
The aim of this study is to evaluate patients with hepatic hydatidosis whose symptom at diagnosis was obstructive jaundice. As well as analyzing, the rate of performing preoperative ERCP, the results after surgery and morbidity
This is a retrospective study to evaluate the outcomes of endoscopic biliary drainage according to the timing of distal malignant biliary obstruction (MBO) in relation to gastric outlet obstruction (GOO) and the location of GOO.
The aim of the present study was therefore to evaluate if the perioperative administration of symbiotics reduces postoperative infectious morbidity in jaundiced patients scheduled for hepato-biliary and pancreatic surgery.
Patients with malignant obstructive jaundice (cancer of head of pancreas and cholangiocarcinoma) generally have a very poor prognosis with less than 20% patients having resectable disease at presentation. These patients also have a very poor quality of life with a life expectancy of 6-8 months. Jaundice associated with pruritus, poor appetite, malabsorption and loss of weight and cholangitis is the most common and troublesome problem. Placement of metallic stents has been the standard of care for patients with unresectable disease. However, about 50% of these stents get blocked in 6-8 months. Use of endoscopic Radio-frequency Ablation (RFA) prior to placement of metal stents may increase the patency of these stents