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UnknownNCT05811091

Pathological Patterns in Chronic Diarrhea With Normal Colonoscopy

Prevalence of Pathological Patterns in Patients of Chronic Diarrhea With Normal Colonoscopy

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Assiut University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

To asses prevalence of pathological findings in patients with chronic diarrhea and normal colonoscopy

Detailed description

diarrhea is defined as the of 3 or more loose or liquid stools per day, or more frequently than is normal for the individual. 3. (World Health ion. Diarrhoeal disease .Available 2017) Diarrhea can be separated into acute, persistent and chronic types based on duration. Acute diarrhea lasts less than 14 days whereas persistent diarrhea is longer than 14 days, but no longer than 28 days( Zilla GC, Israel EJ. et al ..2012) Chronic diarrhea than 28 days. (Schiller LR, Parda DS, et al..2017) In addition to duration of symptoms, chronic diarrhea also tends to occur without a clear onset whereas persistent diarrhea can be thought of as an acute process that has persisted for a longer period.( zilla GC, Israel EJ. et al ..2012) it can be secondary to such heterogeneous causes as drug side effects, structural abnormalities of the small bowel and/or colon, the result of previous gastrointestinal surgery, inflammatory or neo-plastic pancreato biliary disease, or as part of an intestinal functional disorder, such as functional diarrhea, or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) that is diarrhea predominant (IBS-D)or post infectious (PI-IBS) ( Burgers K, Lindberg B, 2020) or Primary eosinophilic colitis (PEC) is defined as an inflam-matory disease of unknown etiology that mainly manifests as abdominal pain and diarrhea, segmental or diffuse infil-tration of eosinophils in the mucosa of the colon,( Villanueva MS, Alimi Y.et al ..2015)( Impellizzeri G, Marasco G ,et al ..2019) or Enteropathies( are diseases that affect small bowel (SB) function and clinically manifest as chronic diarrhea).( Jansson-Knodell CL, Hujoel IA, et al 2017) as Monomorphic epitheliotropic intestinal T-cell lymphoma(MEITL) is a rare aggressive disease that mainly affects the SuB mucosa. Its symptoms can be nonspecific, but often presents chronic diarrhea (Ramírez-Quintero JD, Carvajal JJ,et al..2021) Evaluation of the colonic mucosa is very helpful in detecting inflam-matory bowel disease, ischemic colitis, microscopic colitis, neoplasis, and intraepithelial infections. The endoscopic appearance of the colon is normal, or almost normal, in some of those diseases, and thus they can go by un detected .Different studies have shown that systematic endoscopic biopsies of the colon provide good diagnostic yield in patients with chronic non inflammatory diarrhea and normal colonoscopy (López-Valenzuela LA, Murcio-Pérez E, et al..2019) chronic inflammatory disorder of the large intestine that mainly affects the elderly. Microscopic colitis differs from classical inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in its almost normal-appearing colonic mucosa and histological findings consistent with increased lymphocytic infiltrates with or without collagen fiber expansion (Khalili et al., 2020). Microscopic colitis has two major subtypes, lymphocytic colitis (LC) and collagenous colitis (CC) (Shor et al., 2019) chronic watery diarrhea and often have no weight loss These forms of colitis also have an entirely of normal endoscopic appearance (Macaigne et al., 2014). If colonoscopy is done in patients suspected of having IBS-D, random colon biopsies should be done to rule out , structural abnormalities of the small bowel and/or colon, the result of previous gastrointestinal surgery, inflammatory or neo-plastic pancreato biliary disease, or as part of an intestinal functional disorder, such as functional diarrhea, or irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) that is diarrhea predominant (IBS-D)or post infectious (PI-IBS) ( Burgers K, Lindberg B, 2020) or Primary eosinophilic colitis and microscopic colitis (Münch et al., 2020).

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2024-03-05
Primary completion
2024-03-06
Completion
2024-05-05
First posted
2023-04-13
Last updated
2023-04-13

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05811091. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.