Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00389116

Value of CT-Scan and Oral Gastrografin in the Management of Post Operative Small Bowel Obstruction

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
242 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Rouen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Small bowel obstructions are responsible for 2 to 5% of emergency hospital admissions and 20% of all emergency surgical procedures. In 60 to 80% of cases, acute small bowel obstructions are the consequence of intraperitoneal postoperative adhesions. They constitute an extremely frequent pathology, leading to a high rate of hospital admissions and money expense. Management of small bowel obstruction is based on 2 options: either a surgical approach where all patients are operating on, or a conservative treatment in which surgery is proposed in case of failure of medical treatment. The surgical approach leads to operate on an excessive rate of patients while the medical approach increases the risk of increased small bowel resection, morbidity rate or hospitalization duration. In order to improve the management of small bowel obstruction, it seems necessary to better distinguish patients that need an emergency surgical procedure from patients in which medical treatment will be useful. Many studies have been performed to investigate the value of imaging in the management of small bowel obstruction, using abdominal X-ray, oral gastrografin administration or CT-Scan. The aim of this study is to analyse the effect of a systematic performance of imaging investigation on the management of patients presenting with a postoperative small bowel obstruction. All patients suffering from a postoperative small bowel obstruction will be included in this study. They will be randomised in 2 groups. In group S, patients will have CT-Scan and oral water administration while in group SG, Patients will have CT-Scan and oral gastrografin administration The major end point of this study is to analyse whether imaging examination can reduce the need for a surgical approach or the rate of small bowel resection and to determine its influence on fasting time or hospitalization duration

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGgastrograffiningestion
DRUGwateroral water ingestion

Timeline

Start date
2006-11-01
Primary completion
2009-08-01
Completion
2010-08-01
First posted
2006-10-18
Last updated
2011-02-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00389116. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.