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Active clinical trials for "Jaundice"

Results 41-50 of 154

The Effects of Dexamethasone Administration on Jaundice Following Liver Resection

Liver DysfunctionHepatectomy2 more

The investigators were aiming to evaluate whether dexamethasone administration accelerates the recovery from hepatectomy-related jaundice and decreases the rates of post-hepatectomy liver failure and its safety in the subjects who developed elevated serum total bilirubin.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Remaxol® in Malignant Mechanical Jaundice

Jaundice; Malignant

The trial intends to study the safety and efficacy of Remaxol® (succinate + methionine + inosine + nicotinamide; POLYSAN Ltd., Russia),solution for infusion for the reduction of hyperbilirubinemia in patients with obstructive jaundice caused by tumor (malignancy).

Completed28 enrollment criteria

Remaxol® in Mechanical Jaundice of Non-malignant Origin

JaundiceObstructive

The purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of Remaxol (succinate + methionine + inosine + nicotinamide; POLYSAN Ltd., Russia) infusions at dose 400 and 800 ml to treat mechanical jaundice of non-tumor cause during the first week after surgery.

Completed35 enrollment criteria

Improvement in Gross Motor Function and Muscle Tone in Children With Cerebral Palsy Related to Neonatal...

Cerebral Palsy

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of stem cells for cerebral palsy related to neonatal icterus

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Endoscopic Versus Percutaneous Biliary Drainage for Resectable Pancreatic Head Cancer

Pancreatic Head CancerObstructive Jaundice

Patients with potentially resectable pancreatic head cancer and high bilirubin level, were stratified into two equal groups according to the method of biliary drainage: endoscopic stenting or percutaneous drainage.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Comparison Between Turquoise and Blue Light in Treatment of Neonatal Jaundice Using Light Emission...

Uncomplicated Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia

The optimal wavelength for phototherapy for neonatal jaundice remains to be clarified by clinical studies. Previous iv vivo studies have shown that turquoise light at wavelength about 490 nm is more efficacious than blue light at wavelength 460 nm, which is the golden standard in phototherapy treatment today. Though, previous studies used light tubes, today we use light emitting diodes (LED'S). The overall aim of this study was therefore to compare the efficacy of turquoise LED's versus blue LED's for decreasing total serum bilirubin in neonates with gestational age > 33 weeks and uncomplicated hyperbilirubinemia.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Radiofrequency Ablation for Biliopancreatic Malignancy

Pancreas CancerCholangiocarcinoma1 more

This phase-2 study aims to evaluate feasibility, safety and efficacy of thermal ablation of biliary obstructive malignancies by means of radiofrequency ablation (RFA, ELRA, StarMed) during endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreaticography (ERCP) with primary intent to obtain palliative biliary drainage via stenting

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Treatment of Neonatal Jaundice With Filtered Sunlight Phototherapy: Safety and Efficacy in African...

JaundiceNeonatal

The primary objective of this study is to determine the safety and efficacy of filtered sunlight phototherapy. Sunlight will be filtered by flexible (window-tinting) film. The subject population will be neonates born at Island Maternity Hospital, Lagos, Nigeria. The rationale for conducting the study is that in Nigeria, and other countries that may not have effective commercial light devices or have reliable access to electric power to operate them, filtered sunlight phototherapy might offer a safe and effective treatment for neonatal jaundice. Phase I of the study focused on the safety and efficacy of filtered sunlight phototherapy. Phase II of the study was a randomized controlled non-inferiority clinical trial comparing the efficacy of filtered sunlight phototherapy with conventional phototherapy.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Prospective Randomized Study of PTC and EUS-guided Drainage of the Bile Duct

Jaundice

At this time, endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) stay the gold standard method to achieve biliary drainage in case of malignant or benign stricture. When ERCP fail or if the major papilla is not suitable, percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD) is the most commonly used alternative, surgery having higher morbidity and mortality rates, unacceptable especially in palliative situation. Recent developments in interventional endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) allow new endoluminal approaches to pancreatic-biliary structures, such as cysto-enterostomy or pancreatic-enterostomy. More recently were described the possibility to realize EUS-guided biliary drainage, through the duodenal or the gastric wall. Advantages of the EUS-guided approach are to be realizable even the papilla is not suitable endoscopically (duodenal stricture or post-surgical status) and to allow if necessary extra-tumoral non anatomic drainage (hepaticogastrostomy). This technique is actually an alternative to PTBD. In comparison of the PTBD, EUS-guided route seems to have less morbidity and to avoid external biliary drainage. Indeed, the morbidity rate of the percutaneous biliary drainage and the EUS-guided biliary drainage range respectively from 25 to 35% and from 0 to 23%. However, none study compare prospectively both techniques. Aims of this study are to compare the morbidity rate, feasibility and efficacy of these techniques.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Stannsoporfin With Light Therapy for Newborn Babies With Jaundice

JaundiceNeonatal2 more

It is normal for red blood cells to die, even in newborn babies. The waste from that is called bilirubin. The liver clears bilirubin out of the body. Some babies are born with illness that makes red blood cells die too fast, so the liver is not strong enough to keep up with it. The yellowish color in eyes or skin means there is too much bilirubin in the body. It can be dangerous if a baby's bilirubin gets too high. Special lights are put on jaundiced babies (called phototherapy) to help the liver get rid of bilirubin. This study tests an experimental drug to see if it can help the liver even more, by safely cutting down the amount of bilirubin the body is making in the first place.

Completed30 enrollment criteria
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