Postcholecystectomy syndrome
MONDO:0006916Abdominal symptoms after removal of the gallbladder. The common postoperative symptoms are often the same as those present before the operation, such as colic, bloating, nausea, and vomiting. There is pain on palpation of the right upper quadrant and sometimes jaundice. The term is often used, inaccurately, to describe such postoperative symptoms not due to gallbladder removal.
14 clinical trials for this condition and its sub-types.
Follow this condition — get notified about new trialsBroader categories
-
Bladder surgery patients may benefit from Pre-Op nutrition drink
Disease control Recruiting nowThis study tests whether giving patients a special nutritional drink (immunonutrition) before bladder removal surgery can reduce complications like infections. About 232 adults having open cystectomy for various bladder conditions will be randomly assigned to receive the drink or…
Phase: PHASE3 • Sponsor: Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois • Aim: Disease control
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 08:03 UTC
-
Let it fall? study tests if letting catheters drop out on their own is better than nurse removal
Symptom relief Recruiting nowThis study tests whether letting a bladder catheter fall out on its own (passive removal) is better than having a nurse pull it out (active removal) after urological surgery. 160 men will be randomly assigned to one method. Researchers will measure satisfaction, pain, and anxiety…
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Hospices Civils de Lyon • Aim: Symptom relief
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 11:02 UTC
-
NIH launches massive GI data bank to fuel future discoveries
Knowledge-focused Recruiting nowThis study aims to collect medical data and biological samples (blood, urine, stool, and tissue) from up to 4,000 adults with known or suspected gastrointestinal diseases. Participants receive standard medical care at the NIH, and any extra samples or leftover tissue from procedu…
Sponsor: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 14:00 UTC
-
New dissolving trimedat tablet tested for digestive disorders
Knowledge-focused Recruiting nowThis study compares a new orally disintegrating form of Trimedat (trimebutine) to the standard tablet in 36 healthy adults. The goal is to see if the new version is absorbed similarly and is safe. This trial does not treat any disease; it only gathers data on how the drug behaves…
Phase: PHASE1 • Sponsor: Valenta Pharm JSC • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 09:06 UTC
-
Can videos and quizzes help patients better understand surgery?
Knowledge-focused Recruiting nowThis study tests a new method to help patients understand complex spine or prostate surgeries before they agree to them. Instead of just reading a form, patients watch multimedia content and answer questions to check their understanding. The goal is to see if this approach makes …
Phase: NA • Sponsor: Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 09:01 UTC
-
Can AI match doctors? new study puts ChatGPT to the test on urology cases
Knowledge-focused Recruiting nowThis study looks at how well three AI models—ChatGPT, Gemini, and Deepseek—can diagnose and suggest treatments for urology diseases. Researchers will use 800 past patient records from four hospitals to check the AI's accuracy and usefulness. The goal is to understand if AI can he…
Sponsor: First Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 09:00 UTC
-
Albumin recovery time may forecast surgical outcomes
Knowledge-focused Recruiting nowThis study tracks 1,000 patients undergoing major liver, pancreas, or bile duct surgery to see if the time it takes for their albumin levels to return to normal can predict complications and length of hospital stay. Albumin is a protein that drops after surgery due to inflammatio…
Sponsor: Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences, India • Aim: Knowledge-focused
Last updated Jun 27, 2026 08:07 UTC