View clinical trials related to Liver Fibrosis.
Filter by:The main purpose of the present study is to compare the diagnostic performance of three non-invasive stiffness imaging methods (TE, SWE and MRE) in a consecutive cohort of patients with chronic viral C hepatitis or co-infected by HCV+ Human Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).
This study is to establish a noninvasive diagnostic platform based on hemodynamic information for the assessment of liver fibrosis, liver cirrhosis and portal hypertension.
This is a prospective observational study which will recruit up to 100 paediatric participants over a period of 30 months to determine whether MRI is as accurate at detecting, distinguishing, and monitoring liver disease as current standard of care techniques such as liver biopsy and fibroscan.
Early diagnosis and treatment of liver fibrosis can repress or delay the development of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. The purpose of this pilot study is to evaluate non-invasive multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques in the detection and grading of liver fibrosis, so that patients can be treated in time. These techniques combined could reach high diagnostic performance for detection of liver fibrosis, and could decrease the number of liver biopsies.
Quantification of hepatic fibrosis by IVIM sequences in 1.5T MRI.
The purpose of this study is to recruit a random and representative sample of individuals within several Zambian communities for markers of Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and to characterize chronic HBV infection and indications for treatment.
Tobacco and alcohol are the two major risk factors for upper respiratory tract cancer (VADS).
The purpose of this multi-center prospective study is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of S-Shearwave, a newly developed ultrasound shear wave elastography, for the assessment of hepatic fibrosis.
Primary Objective: To evaluate the long-term outcomes including liver related morbidity, mortality and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development as compared to those of historical control with interferon(IFN)-based treatment. Secondary Objective: 1. To access liver fibrosis progression/regression in CHC patients after sofosbuvir-based treatment. 2. To investigate the long-term outcomes of extrahepatic manifestations of the sofosbuvir-based treated cohort as compared to their pretreatment status.
The goal of this study is to learn more about liver fibrosis and methods to detect it. We will evaluate and compare multiple MRI based measures of liver fibrosis in subjects with and without liver disease.