# Diagnosing Acute Onset Insufficient Intestinal Blood Flow (Bowel Ischemia) With a Novel CT Technique Called Dual-energy CT (DECT). This Observational Study Seeks to Evaluate Whether DECT Can Improve the Diagnosis of Bowel Ischemia and How the DECT Findings Correlate With Intraoperative Findings

> **NCT04561323** · — · UNKNOWN · sponsor: **Rigshospitalet, Denmark** · enrollment: 44 (estimated)

## Conditions studied

- Bowel Ischemia
- Acute Bowel Ischemia / Infarction

## Interventions

- **DIAGNOSTIC_TEST:** Dual-energy CT

## Key facts

- **NCT ID:** NCT04561323
- **Lead sponsor:** Rigshospitalet, Denmark
- **Sponsor class:** OTHER
- **Phase:** —
- **Study type:** OBSERVATIONAL
- **Status:** UNKNOWN
- **Start date:** 2020-11-01
- **Primary completion:** 2022-04-01
- **Final completion:** 2022-04-01
- **Target enrollment:** 44 (ESTIMATED)
- **Last updated:** 2021-03-10


## Primary source

ClinicalTrials.gov registry: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT04561323

## Citation

> US National Library of Medicine, ClinicalTrials.gov registration NCT04561323, "Diagnosing Acute Onset Insufficient Intestinal Blood Flow (Bowel Ischemia) With a Novel CT Technique Called Dual-energy CT (DECT). This Observational Study Seeks to Evaluate Whether DECT Can Improve the Diagnosis of Bowel Ischemia and How the DECT Findings Correlate With Intraoperative Findings". Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-06-12 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/clinical/NCT04561323. Licensed CC0.

---

*[Clinical trials dataset](/datasets/clinical-trials) · CC0 1.0*
