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Active clinical trials for "Inflammatory Bowel Diseases"

Results 351-360 of 1072

Casein Glycomacropeptide in Active Distal Ulcerative Colitis (Pilot Study)

ColitisUlcerative1 more

Casein glycomacropeptide (CGMP) has anti-inflammatory properties in experimental rodent colitis and using human in vitro inflammation models. Its use as a food ingredient has proven safe and with no influence on dietary intake. We hypothesize that orally administered CGMP has a beneficial effect comparable to that of mesalazine in active distal ulcerative colitis.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Weekly Vitamin D in Pediatric IBD

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesSkin Pigmentation

The purpose of this study is to determine whether weekly dosing of oral vitamin D3 is effective in correcting low vitamin D levels in children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease (also known as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis).

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Eicosapentaenoic Free Fatty Acid and Fecal Calprotectin in Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Ulcerative ColitisCrohn's Disease

The aim of this study is to test Eicosapentaenoic free fatty acid's effects on calprotectin levels in IBD patients in clinical remission. During the study fecal calprotectin levels will be measured every 3 months and clinical flares will be registered.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Agaricus Blazei Murill (ABM) in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Based on the anti-inflammatory and stabilising effect of the AbM, (Agaricus Blazei Murill) based mushroom extract AndoSanTM on cytokine release in blood in vivo and ex vivo in healthy volunteers after 12 days consumption, the aim in this study is to investigate whether same effect is valid in patients with IBD (inflammatory bowel disease). In addition, calprotectin an abundant cytosolic protein in neutrophils and a surrogate marker for degree of intestinal inflammation will be measured in blood and feces of these patients.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Functional Restoration After Abdominal and Pelvic Laparoscopic Surgery: Effect of Perioperative...

Colon CancerInflammatory Bowel Diseases1 more

This is a blinded randomized controlled trial in patients undergoing laparoscopic colon surgery. The aim of this study is to assess whether perioperative intravenous lidocaine has an impact on the early post operative physical activity recovery of patients scheduled for laparoscopic colon surgery. Twenty patients will receive thoracic epidural analgesia, twenty patients will receive intravenous lidocaine plus patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) and twenty patients will receive only PCA. Hypothesis: patients receiving perioperative intravenous lidocaine, post operative recovery will be faster and decrease pain intensity, opioid consumption and side effects, length of hospital stay; probably as a result of a significant opioid sparing and attenuated inflammatory response.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

The Home Telemanagement (UC HAT) Trial for Patients With Ulcerative Colitis

Inflammatory Bowel DiseaseUlcerative Colitis

The purpose of this study is to determine if home automated telemanagement improves bowel symptoms, quality of life, compliance with medications, and health care utilization compared to best available care in patients with ulcerative colitis.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Balsalazide Disodium vs. Mesalamine in Mildly to Moderately Active Ulcerative Colitis

Inflammatory Bowel DiseaseUlcerative Colitis

To establish the efficacy and safety of a new tablet formulation and dosing regimen of balsalazide disodium dosed twice daily in achieving clinical improvement in subjects with mildly to moderately active ulcerative colitis after 6 weeks of therapy.

Completed29 enrollment criteria

Safety and Efficacy of AST-120 in Mild to Moderate Crohn's Patients With Fistulas

Inflammatory Bowel DiseaseIntestinal Fistula

The objective of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the experimental drug AST-120 in treating patients with mild to moderately severe Crohn's disease who have fistulas. The study will test whether or not patients receiving AST-120 experience a greater reduction in number of draining fistulas and improvement of their other Crohn's disease symptoms versus patients who receive placebo (material that does not contain any active medication).

Completed30 enrollment criteria

Dietetic Efficacy of Mare's Milk for Patients With Chronic Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Ulcerative ColitisCrohns Disease

Mare's milk consumption could improve the well-being in patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, respectively.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Evaluate Established Anti-DEFA5 mAbs Diagnostic Efficacy and Safety in IBD

Inflammatory Bowel DiseasesUlcerative Colitis2 more

Investigators propose to validate efficacy and safety of the detection of DEFA5 in the diagnosis of the colonic IBD using longitudinal vs. cross-sectional studies of known patient clinical data to correlate with their endoscopy biopsy data. 30% of colonic IBD patients cannot be accurately diagnosed (CC vs. UC) in a timely manner even when a state-of-the-art classification system of combined clinical, endoscopic, radiologic and histologic tools are used. When the diagnostic classification for these two diseases is inconclusive, the condition is termed indeterminate colitis (IC). Here, the central medical challenge is the discrimination of IBD into the specific subtypes with high accuracy, as it greatly effects surgical care of patients. Diagnostic accuracy of IC into either authentic UC or CC is of utmost importance when determining a patient's candidacy for RPC-IPAA surgery, the standard curative surgical procedure for UC. Further, incorrect diagnosis and treatment carry potential morbidity from inappropriate and unnecessary surgery and costs. The success outcomes of RPC-IPAA surgery and convalescence depend on correct diagnosis. To address IBD diagnosis ambiguity and delays in IBD clinical settings, investigators developed a proteomic signature to discriminate between UC and CC patients that also will predict the outcome of IC patients for their eventual progress to either UC or CC. Our published data has shown robust evidence supporting presence of human alpha-defensin 5 (DEFA5) in areas of the colon mucosa with aberrant expression of apparent Paneth cell-like cells (PCLCs) or crypt cell-like cells (CCLCs), which identifies an area of colonic ileal metaplasia, consistent with the diagnosis of CC. DEFA5 bioassay discriminated CC and UC in a cohort of all IC patients with accuracy. A fit logistic model with group CC and UC as the outcome and the DEFA5 as independent variable differentiator with a positive predictive value of 96%. These findings were obtained solely from colectomy specimens for both the discovery and validation analyses. Investigators believe that use of endoscopy biopsies would be indifferent, which is the purpose of this prospective patient centered clinical study. Investigators propose to demonstrate that UC and CC, the two unsolved medical subtypes of pathology with no drugs for a cure, can accurately be distinguished molecularly by examining CCLCs-secreted DEFA5 in colonic endoscopy biopsies instantly. Our proposal is highly innovative, as it highlights the robustness of DEFA5 and its clinical relevance to IBD is both in science and the anticipated impact, as investigators seek to better understand difficulty to determine 'subtypes" and translate that to improve diagnosis, treatment, clinical outcomes, and quality of life for patients and the realm of clinical care. DEFA5 immunoreactivity in colonic endoscopy biopsies could be a rapid potential diagnostic signature to resolve IC into authentic UC and CC with a first clinic endoscopy biopsy. IC is likely to be eliminated for good.

Not yet recruiting12 enrollment criteria
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