View clinical trials related to Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding.
Filter by:Upper Gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) is a medical emergency and the most common cause of hospitalization associated with digestive disease. Proper initial resuscitation is the first step in the management of UGIB patients. Today, modern pulmonary ultrasound is used in different clinical settings, such as intensive care, emergency medicine and/or traumatology. In the last years, the use of this has been standardized both in internal medicine and in pulmonary medicine. The primary objective is to describe the findings of pulmonary ultrasound and its relationship with severity in patients with UGIB. The investigators will include all patients with UGIB. A pulmonary and vena cava ultrasound will be performed on admission to the emergency room, 10 minutes prior to endoscopy and 24 hours after having performed the endoscopy. The use of thoracic point-of-care ultrasound (TPOCUS) has been standardized in both internal and pulmonary medicine. There is a concern about the role of TPOCUS useful as a severity prognostic tool in patients with UGIB. The team proposes that TPOCUS is a severity prognostic tool in UGIB patients. Main Outcome: To describe the findings of TPOCUS in patients with variceal and non-variceal UGIB. Secondary Objectives: 1. Correlate the presence of B-type lines on TPOCUS with mean arterial pressure in UGIB patients. 2. Correlate the inferior vena cava diameter with the Model for End-stage Liver Disease scale in UGIB patients. 3. Correlate the inferior vena cava diameter with the 48 hours post-admission mortality of UGIB patients. Authors design a prospective, longitudinal, descriptive study to identify the findings of TPOCUS in patients with variceal and non-variceal UGIB. Patients will be included in the study since May 15th through October 30th 2019, admitted to the University Hospital, "Dr. José E. González", Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León.
This is an ambispective single-center cohort study of pediatric patients with portal hypertension and esophageal varices. The study was designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of primary prophylaxis with endoscopic variceal ligation to prevent upper gastrointestinal bleeding compared to non-selected beta-blockers prophylaxis.
A monitoring system was developed for detecting upper gastrointestinal (UGI) rebleeding. This system consists of (1) a tiny endoscopy, (2) a wearable device, and (3) a software. The endoscopy is inserted to UGI tract via nasal cavity and then stayed there for 3 days. The wearable device is set to regularly receive the pictures from the endoscopy and sent to the software, which is able to automatically analyze whether the rebleeding occurs. This study aims to test the feasibility and efficacy of the monitoring system.
Infants with congenital heart disease often require an intervention during their first year of life. Infants are generally admitted to a cardiac intensive care unit and are routinely prescribed stress ulcer prophylaxis to decrease acid release from the stomach to prevent stress ulcer formation. However, these medicines may not be safe and could put infants at increased risk for hospital-acquired infections, necrotizing enterocolitis and alteration to the infant's microbiome. The investigators plan to assess the feasibility of conducting a prospective, blinded randomized control trial to determine the safety of withholding stress ulcer prophylaxis in critically ill infants with congenital heart disease. In addition, the investigators plan to examine the changes to the infant's microbiome through oral, gastric and stool samples and compare hospital-acquired infections.
This is a multi-center randomized controlled trial examining the use of Video Capsule Endoscopy (VCE) to discharge low-moderate risk patients with suspected upper gastrointestinal bleeds (UGIB) from the Emergency Department (ED.) The investigators will enroll 100 subjects at 4 sites who present with signs of hemodynamically stable UGIBs and compare VCE risk assessment to an Active Control (AC) group who receive inpatient upper endoscopy (EGD).
Transesophageal echocardiography is commonly used during cardiac surgery. Complications of transesophageal echocardiography are rare (1,2%), but are often underestimated and can lead to unrecognized blood loss and site of infection. This study wants to assess the mucosa of pharynx, upper larynx, esophagus and stomach prior to and after echo probe insertion during cardiac surgery with endoscopy.
UI-EWD (NextBiomedical Co, Incheon, South Korea), a new hemostatic powder for endoscopic treatment of high-risk bleeding peptic ulcers and bleeding after ESD/EMR.
Acute upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (UGIH) is a common condition that leads to hospital admission, and has significant associated morbidity and mortality, especially in the elderly. The most common causes of acute UGIH are nonvariceal. Although up 70% of non-variceal bleeds settle with conservative measures, endoscopic therapy is the established method for treating those bleeds for which this is not sufficient. Despite advances and increased expertise in managing upper gastrointestinal bleeding, the associated mortality of up to 15% has remained unchanged for several years. EndoClot is a novel topical hemostatic powder approved for use in non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding. This study examines its efficacy for endoscopic hemostasis in non-variceal upper gastrointestinal bleeding. This is a multicenter, prospective, randomized study.
This is a prospective and observational study to evaluate oncologic patients that presented upper gastrointestinal bleeding with the use of some prognostic scores.
Background - Patients presented to hospital with coffee ground vomiting and black stool may not be actually having upper gastrointestinal bleeding (UGIB) - Hospital admission can be avoided if serious UGIB can be excluded - To date, the only useful tool to triage patient for hospital admission in UGIB is by using clinical score such as Rockall score or Blatchford score - These scores are cumbersome and only exclude the most benign cases, but they are not useful in differentiating those who needs intervention - In our pilot study, investigators found that capsule endoscopy can be used to identify patients with fresh blood and real coffee ground substance in the stomach and it is superior to nasogastric tube - Most of UGI lesions leading to bleeding can be diagnosed by capsule endoscopy Objectives The current study is designed 1. to validate capsule endoscopy is an effective method in identifying patients with UGIB 2. to study whether the capsule endoscopy can reduce requirement of hospital admission in patients with suspected UGIB 3. to study if capsule endoscopy can help to identify patients with UGIB that may require urgent (within 24 hours) endoscopy and intervention 4. to study the cost-effectiveness of capsule endoscopy being used as a triaging tool in the management of UGIB 5. to compare the effectiveness of capsule endoscopy against Blatchford score in identifying patients with UGIB that may require endoscopic intervention.