View clinical trials related to Mesenteric Ischemia.
Filter by:Acute mesenteric ischaemia (AMI) is a notorious disease with a high mortality, the diagnostic and management is truly multidisciplinary, but not very extended. The aim of this study is to analyse the results of the patients admited with an AMI in Catalonia.
Acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) is a life-threatening condition with an increasing incidence (7-13/100000 PY). The mortality of AMI is associated with the development and extent of transmural intestinal necrosis (IN), ranging from 25% without IN to 75% with IN. Given its potential reversibility, preventing the progression of AMI towards IN is now considered a primary therapeutic goal. Early management of AMI can thus avoid fatal outcomes and prevent lifelong complications such as short bowel syndrome. Following the results of a pilot study showing an improvement in survival and lower resection rates, our team created a first-of-its-kind intestinal stroke center (SURVI unit, Beaujon Hospital, Clichy, France) that provides 24/7 standardized multimodal and multidisciplinary care to AMI patients referred from all hospitals in the Paris region. As no randomized clinical trial has ever been conducted, the treatment offered by SURVI is based on pathophysiological knowledge and observational clinical data. AMI naturally progresses to sepsis, surgical complications, and multi-organ failure, direct consequences of IN. Features of sepsis are reported in up to 90% of AMI patients compared with 3-22% of patients with brain or myocardial ischemia, supporting a specific septic component in AMI. Experimental studies demonstrated reduced translocation and mortality in germ-free animals or after administration of oral antibiotics targeting Gram-negative and anaerobic early bacterial overgrowth and translocation. In a prospective observational study, the investigators recently suggested a protective effect of systematic oral antibiotics in terms of intestinal preservation, yielding a reduced occurrence of IN (HR: 0.16, 95% confidence interval 0.03-0.62). However, the systematic use of oral antibiotics in AMI remains controversial due to the individual and collective risk of increasing the carriage of multi-drug resistant bacterias.
Acute mesenteric ischemia (AMI) is a notorious disease with a high mortality, the diagnostic and management is truly multidisciplinary, but it is not the reality in many Hospitals. The aim of this study is to analyse the results of the patients admitted with an AMI in Hospital de Mar.
Current study will be undertaken to identify combinations of biomarkers that can reliably identify acute mesenteric ischaemia (AMI) and distinguish between non-transmural and transmural ischaemia. Different combinations of biomarkers for different sub-types and severity of AMI, and different time points of measurement after onset of symptoms.
CMI is an incapacitating disease and timely diagnosis remains problematic. Despite the substantial compensatory capacity of the mesenteric circulation CMI is relatively common, its incidence being comparable to other well-known diseases like Crohn's disease. Diagnostic tools are needed for two purposes since the exclusion of CMI currently requires a cumbersome complication-prone diagnostic workup and since a definitive diagnosis is mainly established per exclusionem. First, a sensitive test is desirable to rule out CMI and avoid excessive diagnostic investigations. Quantification of mesenteric arterial calcification on computed tomography (CT) seems suitable for this purpose, synonymous with the coronary artery calcium score. Second, a specific test is required confirming CMI by detection of mucosal ischemia during a meal, when oxygen demand peaks. A breath test, based on the requirement of oxygen to absorb and metabolize 13C-butyrate in the enterocyte, could detect mucosal ischemia Objective: Facilitating diagnosis of chronic mesenteric ischemia (CMI) using 1) the mesenteric artery calcium score (MACS) and 2) mucosal ischemia detection by butyrate breath testing Study design: Multicentre prospective cohort studies.
Chronic meseteric ischemia (CMI) is a disease characterized by an insufficient blood supply to the intestines due to a narrowing (stenosis) of one or multiple intestinal arteries. The primary symptom is abdominal pain especially during meal digestion. Currently the diagnosis of CMI is heavily reliant on the exclusion of differential diagnoses. With this study we wish to evaluate whether a newer CT technology called dual-energy CT (DECT) may be able to visualize this altered blood flow during meal consumption.
Acute mesenteric ischemia is a life-threatening condition with high mortality. Acute mesenteric ischemia is responsible for fewer than one in 1000 hospital admissions, but its mortality rate ranges between 30% and 90% . Acute mesenteric ischemia is most commonly secondary to embolism followed by arterial thrombosis, non-occlusive ischemia, and less commonly venous thrombosis . Delay in diagnosis contributes to the continued high mortality rate. Early diagnosis and prompt effective treatment are essential to Correspondence to improve clinical outcomes
Initial treatment in the management of acute mesenteric vein thrombosis (MVT) is controversial. Some authors have proposed a surgical approach, whereas others have advocated medical therapy (anticoagulation). In this study, the investigators analyzed and compared the results obtained with surgical and medical treatment to determine the best initial management for this disease.