View clinical trials related to Ulcer.
Filter by:Ulcerative Colitis (UC) is a chronic Inflammatory Bowel Disease characterized by chronic inflammation of the colon. Composition of gut microbiota of UC patients is abnormal (dysbiosis). Ulcerative Colitis patients have an increased risk of Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) and CDI complications (colectomy, death, recurrence). The reason for this increased risk in IBD patients is not fully understood. The decrease in the proportion of secondary bile acids, induced by microbiota dysbiosis in patients with UC could favor C. difficile infection. The main objective of the study is to describe the composition of bile acids (primary and secondary) in children followed for UC during relapse with or without CDI and to compare it to children with UC in remission and healthy controls. The composition of fecal microbiota will be also describe to correlate dysbiosis and bile acid abnormalities. And finally some fecal biomarkers will be study : short chain fatty acids, metabolic pathway of Tryptophan, and fecal Calprotectin.
Pharmacologic stress ulcer prophylaxis is routinely used in the intensive care unit (ICU) to prevent upper gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding in critically ill patients.
A prospective observational study to assess the energy needs of Ulcerative Colitis patients undergoing total proctocolectomy with ileoanal j-pouch anastomosis.
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the safety and efficacy of nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) and placebo in patients with mild ulcerative colitis (UC). The main question it aims to answer is Whether NMN can alleviate the intestinal pathology of UC patients, so as to play a role in UC treatment or adjuvant therapy. Participants will be randomized into two groups, an NMN group or a placebo group. Patients in the NMN group were treated with NMN intervention for 8 weeks. The placebo group received a placebo intervention for 8 weeks.
The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the possible beneficial effect of silymarin in Ulcerative Colitis adult patients receiving mesalamine. This is trial that will be conducted on 44 adult patients with newly diagnosed Ulcerative Colitis. Patients will be enrolled after obtaining an informed consent from them or their guardians. Patients will be recruited from Rajhy Hospital Outpatient Clinics and Health Insurance Outpatient Clinics at Mabarra Hospital in Assiut, Egypt. The patients will be randomized based on hospital admission days into two groups: - Group Ⅰ (control group): 22 patients will receive mesalamine (4g\day induction & 2g\day maintenance) only for 6 months. - Group Ⅱ (silymarin group): 22 patients will receive mesalamine (4g\day induction & 2g\day maintenance) and silymarin (140 mg\day) for 6 months. The primary outcome will be clinical improvement defined as a 2 point or more decrease in the Mayo score from baseline. The secondary outcomes will be the change in the level of fecal calprotectin, superoxide dismutase and TNF-α.
The goal of this observational study is to construct and validate a Computer-aided (CADx)System in Real-time Characterization of Colorectal Ulcrerative Diseases. The main question it aims to answer are to demonstrate whether the newly developed CADx system has a high-level diagnostic accuracy in predicting characterization of colorectal ulcerative diseases. It is a multi-center, retrospective study. The study retrospectively collected colonoscopy images and videos of colorectal ulcers (including colorectal cancer, Crohn's disease, Ulcerative colitis, Intestinal tuberculosis and ischemic enteritis). A training cohort will be developed from majority of the included cases, followed by a validation cohort with the remaining cases. A CADx system in real-time characterization of colonic ulcer diseases was constructed using artificial intelligence to extract endoscopic features from the training set. Subsequently, the performance of the CADx system was preliminarily tested through the validation set.
The goal of this observational study is to test the diagnostic accuracy of the newly developed CADx system in predicting the histopathology of colorectal ulcers when compared to expert endoscopists. The main question it aims to answer are to demonstrate whether the newly developed CADx system has a high-level diagnostic accuracy in predicting characterization of colorectal ulcerative diseases. It is a multi-center study with two phases. The first retrospective phase is the development and validation of a CADx system by feature extraction from endoscopic photos and videos. The second prospective phase is the evaluation and comparison of the diagnostic accuracy between the CADx system, expert endoscopists and junior endoscopists.
Yunnan Baiyao has been treating all kinds of wounds for 120 years, but the evidence of Evidence-based medicine that is truly convincing is insufficient, making its best application method unclear. This study explored the possible indications and use methods of Yunnan Baiyao in different stages of Diabetic foot, and obtained Evidence-based medicine evidence of clinical efficacy. Obtain the discarded tissues of Diabetic foot patients in the treatment and control groups of Yunnan Baiyao after wound debridement, conduct Transcriptome (BulkRNA seq) analysis and detection on the wound tissues, and analyze the related signal pathways and functional genes with significant differences, to help clarify the possible treatment targets of Yunnan Baiyao.
This is a Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multi-center study to evaluate the clinical efficacy and safety of Antimicrobial Peptide PL-5 Topical Spray in patients with mild infections of diabetic foot ulcers. Eligible subjects will be randomized (1:1:1) to receive twice a day, 14 days treatment of Antimicrobial Peptide PL-5 Topical Spray (1‰), Antimicrobial Peptide PL-5 Topical Spray (2‰) and topical placebo (vehicle) spray. In this study, the cut-off date for final analysis is defined as the time when all subjects have completed the last visit or discontinued the study
The ULTRAZ study is designed to better understand the mode of action of S1P receptor modulators. The alteration of leukocyte trafficking due to S1P receptors such as ozanimod is mainly investigated in rodent studies. Several previous studies show a reduced total leukocyte count in peripheral blood and only two study reported the effect of leukocyte subgroups before and after treatment with ozanimod. The change in leukocyte subgroups in peripheral blood as well as colonic mucosa and lymph nodes have not been investigated to our knowledge. Therefore, the aim of this study is to explore the changes in these three compartments.