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Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05016700

Neuropathological Changes of the Intestinal Wall in Patients With Bowel Evacuation Disorders

Correlation of Clinical Symptoms With Neuromorphological Changes of the Colorectal Wall in Patients With a Bowel Evacuation Disorder

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
500 (estimated)
Sponsor
Evangelisches Klinikum Köln Weyertal gGmbH · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Constipation and defecation disorders affect about 15% of the European population and of those up to 30% of the patients over 65 years of age. For those affected, this is associated with major restrictions in quality of life and high health care costs . The underlying causes of constipation and defecation are complex and only partially understood. Intestinal (full wall) resections taken in clinical practice from these patients when conservative therapy has been exhausted show rarefaction of ganglion cell nests in the myenteric plexus and submucosal plexus as well as changes in cholinergic innervation. Initial histopathological investigations suggest an inflammatory genesis of this rarefaction of ganglion cell nests, which will be further characterised/investigated in the context of this study on the basis of further histopathological and serological investigations. This may lead to novel therapeutic approaches that can causally treat the symptoms of those affected.

Detailed description

Intestinal transit disorders (constipation/obstipation) and/or defecation disorders (expulsion disorders) are widespread symptoms in our culture, which, depending on their severity, can become a disease. Epidemiological studies show that up to 30% of the population over the age of 65 is affected. The suffering of those affected is usually very high. The patients are usually treated conservatively at first. The focus is on lifestyle changes, dietary adjustments and medication to support bowel movements. If the symptoms persist despite consistent conservative therapy, additional diagnostics such as laboratory tests, sonography and colonoscopy are performed. Further diagnostic steps include anal manometry, defecography and colon transit time. From 2015 onwards, the systematic neuropathological examination of whole-wall samples was performed on the bowel specimen of patients who were surgically treated for defecation disorders. In addition, in individual cases in which no bowel resection was indicated, rectal full-wall samples were taken to confirm the diagnosis and indication for sacral nerve stimulation (SNS) and examined neuropathologically in the same way. The intestinal wall was examined for ganglion cell nests in the myenteric plexus and the submucosal plexus in order to identify the pathophysiological cause of the transport disorder. The analysis showed rarefaction of the ganglion cell nests in the myenteric plexus and the submucosal plexus, as well as both a change in the cholinergic innervation and changes that suggest an autoimmune initiated process. Increasing evidence links gastroenteritic germs with chronic intestinal motility disorders, so that a Campylobacter or Yersinia infection could well be the trigger for the observed neuropathological changes. The aim of the study is to analyse the pathomechanism of chronic intestinal emptying disorders. Neuropathological findings on the plexus of the intestinal wall specimen are correlated to clinical findings measured by clinical scores in order to identify a diagnostic pattern.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTblood samplewe want to identify a diagnostic option to identify patients, who have a neuropathological distraction of their ganglia cells in the bowel

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-20
Primary completion
2030-12-31
Completion
2033-12-31
First posted
2021-08-23
Last updated
2025-03-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05016700. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.