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Patients With Obstructive Jaundice In Sohag University Hospital

S

Sohag University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Obstructive Jaundice

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: ERCP

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06456476
Soh-Med-24-04-03MS

Details and patient eligibility

About

Study of patients with obstructive jaundice in Sohag university hospital study the clinical, laboratory and imaging charachteristics in patients with obstructive jaundice admitted to sohag university hospital, and to study the available therapeutic options which meight improve patient's quality of life and increase survival rates.

Full description

Jaundice is always a pathological sign on most occasions, so that it should never be ignored. It includes 3 types: haemolytic, hepatocellular and cholestatic (obstructive).

Cholestatic jaundice can be classified into two broad categories: intrahepatic and extrahepatic; Intrahepatic cholestatic jaundice is due to impaired hepatobiliary production and excretion of bile causing bile components to enter the circulation. The concentration of conjugated bilirubin in serum is elevated in cholestatic jaundice. Intrahepatic cholestasis may be due to primary biliary cirrhosis, hepatocellular disease such as acute viral hepatitis infection, drug-induced liver injury ,Dubin-Johnson syndrome, Rotor syndrome, or cholestatic disease of pregnancy. Wilson's disease may also lead to intrahepatic cholestasis due to copper deposition into liver parenchyma, with further hepatocellular dysfunction, and jaundice.1 Extrahepatic cholestasis may be the result of benign causes including choledocholithiasis (is the most frequent cause), primary sclerosing cholangitis, Mirrizi syndrome, postoperative billiary stricture, post inflammatory stricture, pancreatitis, choledochal cyst, pyogenic cholangitis, parasitic diseases, duodenal diverticulosis and AIDS cholangiopathy.2 While malignant causes include cancer head of pancreas, carcinoma of the gall bladder cholangiocarcinoma, carcinoma of the duodenum, ampullary tumors, hepatocellular carcinoma, lymphoma and metastatic tumors.3 Today's obstructive jaundice is more of a medical entity since gastroenterologists, rather than surgeons, handle the majority of obstructive jaundice cases with ERCP or stenting.4 Obstructive jaundice patients typically complain of jaundice, yellowish discoloration of skin and eyes, pruritus, clay colored stool, dark-colored urine and aneroxia.5 Jaundice in choledocholithiasis is intermittent and associated with pain.6-7 Malignant jaundice commonly presents with persistent and progressive painless jaundice, often accompanied by weight loss, anemia, and abdominal mass.6-8 Patients with obstructive jaundice are susceptible to developing deficiencies in nutrition, infectious complications , acute renal failure, and compromised cardiovascular function. Other adverse events , like endotoxemia, hypovolemia, and coagulopathy, can be subtle and dramatically raise mortality and morbidity.9 A combination of many approaches, such as the patient's history, physical examination, biochemical tests, and imaging are needed. Abdominal ultrasonography, the first-line imaging modality used for the diagnosis of obstructive jaundice because it is noninvasive, fast and widely accessible.10 However, it is necessary to combine ultrasonography with other imaging techniques such as; computed tomography (CT), endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS) or magnetic resonance cholangiography (MRCP) to establish local and distant complications and make a choice of the right therapeutic approach.11 also liver biopsy, as well as observation of patient's course, can lead to an accurate diagnosis.

Early and precise detection of etiology of obstructive jaundice can help to manage such patients and thus will enhance the patient's quality of life and increase the survival rate of patients with malignant pathology.12

Enrollment

130 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The patients, clinically diagnosed as suffering from obstructive jaundice and referred to the Department of Internal Medicine for further evaluation.

Exclusion criteria

  • Exclusion criteria were patients below 18 years of age; and patients with jaundice due to causes other than obstructive pathology like hemolytic or hepatocellular jaundice.

Trial design

130 participants in 1 patient group

patints with obstructive jaundicep
Description:
The patients, clinically diagnosed as suffering from obstructive jaundice and referred to the Department of Internal Medicine for further evaluation.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: ERCP

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Alshaimaa I Hamdy, resident; Usama A Arafa, professor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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