1H-19F Gastrointestinal MRI in Health and IBS
Information source: University of Zurich
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on August 23, 2015 Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.
Condition(s) targeted: Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Intervention: 19F capsule (Device); sterculia (Dietary Supplement)
Phase: N/A
Status: Suspended
Sponsored by: University of Zurich Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s): Werner Schwizer, Prof. MD, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: University Hospital Zurich, Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Summary
The aim of this project is to demonstrate and validate the ionizing radiation free and non
invasive assessment of small intestinal anatomy, content and function in healthy and disease
by a newly developed combined proton (1H) and fluorine (19F) magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) framework. Meal induced and pathology related alterations in small intestinal motor
activity, gas distribution and anatomy of healthy volunteers and patients with irritable
bowel syndrome (IBS) will be analyzed with this non invasive MRI approach.
The multinuclear imaging framework consists of a 1H and 19F capable clinical 3T MRI system
with standard 1H abdominal surface coils, a dual-channel transmit-receive abdominal 19F
surface coil, fluorine labelled impermeable and biocompatible capsules for oral
administration (19F capsule) and a 19F projection imaging sequence allowing for the
non-invasive detection of the gastrointestinal positions of single and multiple ingested
capsules in real time. Dedicated post-processing algorithms are applied to extract
parameters of intestinal motor activity from the detected intraluminal capsule movements.
The proposed unique imaging modality allows for the concurrent, non invasive and repeated
analysis of important physiologic parameters of intestinal function together with detailed
anatomical information and thus presents an ideal tool for the evaluation of the analyzed
parameters as potential biomarkers in IBS.
- Trial with medical device
Clinical Details
Official title: Small Intestinal Transit and Motor Function in Health and IBS Patients Studied by Combined 1H and 19F Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Study design: Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective
Primary outcome: Small intestinal transit time in minutes
Secondary outcome: Small intestinal length and intestinal courseSmall intestinal motor activity index Small intestinal transport velocity Local intestinal residence times Volume and distribution of intestinal gas
Eligibility
Minimum age: 18 Years.
Maximum age: 65 Years.
Gender(s): Both.
Criteria:
Inclusion criteria:
- Healthy volunteers and IBS patients must fill out the validated Birmingham IBS
Symptom Questionnaire
- Healthy volunteers must be symptom free of any abdominal complaints.
- IBS patients are defined based on clinical symptoms as described in the Rome III
criteria for irritable bowel syndrome:
- Symptoms of recurrent abdominal pain or discomfort and a marked change in bowel
habit for at least six months, with symptoms experienced on at least three days
of at least three months. Two or more of the following must apply:
- Pain is relieved by bowel movement
- Onset of pain is related to a change in frequency of stool
- Onset of pain is related to a change in the appearance of stool
- Written informed consent
Exclusion criteria:
- Age under 18 or above 65
- Pathologic underweight or overweight (BMI <18 or >30kg/m2)
- Previous history of gastrointestinal disease or surgery (excludes appendectomy,
cholecystectomy, hernia repair and anorectal disorders)
- Previous cardiorespiratory (excludes arterial hypertension), hematologic, renal,
atopic, alimentary or psychiatric disease, diabetes, drug or alcohol abuse,
psychiatric disease
- Patient unable to stop medication that alters gut function for 72 hours prior to the
study, including anticholinergics, prokinetics, proton-pump inhibitors, non-steroidal
antiinflammatory drugs
- Presence of metallic implants, devices or metallic foreign bodies
- Pregnancy and lactation (female patients of child bearing age will receive a
pregnancy test prior to study)
- Female volunteers without adequate contraception for the duration of the study
Involvement in any other clinical trial during the course of this trial, nor within a
period of 30 days prior to its beginning or 30 days after its completion
- Allergy against silicone
- Claustrophobia
Locations and Contacts
University Hospital Zurich, Gastroenterology, Zurich, Switzerland
Additional Information
Starting date: July 2011
Last updated: April 8, 2015
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