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Active clinical trials for "Respiratory Distress Syndrome"

Results 361-370 of 1388

Hyperoxia and Hypertonic Saline in Septic Shock

Septic ShockAdult Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Assessment of the effect of hyperoxia and hypertonic saline on survival in patients with septic shock Hyperoxia and hypertonic saline may have beneficial effects on organ perfusion and oxygenation and may reduce the organ failure occurences. To date, only scarce data are available. Side effects are not well described. Therefore we designed a randomized clinical trial in order to assess the early administration of hypertonic saline and oxygen in the very early beginning of septic shock.

Terminated15 enrollment criteria

The Oscillation for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS) Treated Early (OSCILLATE) Trial

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)

What is the effect of early high frequency oscillation (HFO) versus a lung-protective conventional ventilation (CV) strategy (using HFO only as rescue therapy), on all-cause hospital mortality among patients with severe early acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)?

Terminated30 enrollment criteria

Surfactant Versus Nasal Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (nCPAP) for Respiratory Distress Syndrome...

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Term and near term newborns can present acute respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Surfactant treatment has been shown effective in reducing mechanical ventilation and oxygen treatment durations in the preterm newborn. Whether surfactant treatment is beneficial for term and near term newborns is unknown. The purpose of this study is to compare surfactant treatment vs. nasal continuous positive airways pressure in the newborn between 35 and 41 weeks of gestation with RDS within the first 24 hours of life. The study's primary endpoint is "survival with no oxygen treatment at 72 hours of life". The secondary endpoints are: death, surfactant treatment, pneumothorax, secondary infections, pulmonary hypertension, inhaled nitric oxide treatment, fluid loading treatment, vasopressive amines treatment, mechanical ventilation duration, nCPAP treatment duration, Oxygen treatment duration, Oxygen treatment at 28 days of life, hospitalization duration and treatment strategy cost.

Terminated11 enrollment criteria

Surfactant Via Endotracheal Tube vs. Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA) in Preterm Neonates With Respiratory...

Respiratory Distress SyndromeNewborn

In this study, newborn babies with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS), receiving oxygen via nasal continuous airway pressure (CPAP) modalities, and needing surfactant treatment will be randomized to standard delivery of surfactant via and endotracheal tube airway (inserted after pre-medication for pain with a short-acting narcotic), or to surfactant delivery via laryngeal mask airway (LMA). The intent is to remove the airways and return babies to non-invasive CPAP support, after surfactant is given. The primary outcome measure is the rate of failure of initial surfactant therapy. Standardized failure criteria are reached: a) early, if the baby is unable to be placed back on non-invasive CPAP (i.e., needs tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation) or, b) late, if the baby requires ventilation, retreatment with surfactant within 8 hours or more than 2 doses of surfactant. The objective of this protocol is to reduce the need for endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation in preterm neonates with RDS needing rescue surfactant therapy by instilling surfactant though an LMA, while achieving comparable efficacy of surfactant treatment. The hypothesis is that surfactant treatment through an LMA will decrease the proportion of babies with RDS who require mechanical ventilation or subsequent intubation, when compared to standard surfactant treatment following endotracheal intubation with sedation.

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

High Frequency Oscillatory Ventilation for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Based on recent two-center results (Eur Respir J. 2011 Sep 1. [Epub ahead of print] PMID: 21885390) we hypothesized that intermittent High-frequency oscillation (HFO) combined with Recruitment Maneuvers (RMs) may beneficially affect the pathophysiology and survival of patients with moderate-to-severe Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS). Design: Randomized Controlled Trial. Intervention: Briefly, the HFO-RMs strategy of the intervention (HFO-RMs) group will comprise RMs (3/day) and an initial HFO session of 96 hours (HFO session can be interrupted before the 96-hour time point only if PaO2/FiO2 rises to >200 mmHg for >12 hours), followed by return to lung protective conventional mechanical ventilation (CMV) according to pre-specified oxygenation criteria. Within days 1-10 postrandomization, patients will be returned to HFO upon recurrence of their moderate-to-severe oxygenation disturbance. Patients of the control (CMV) group will receive lung protective CMV.

Terminated13 enrollment criteria

Curosurf and Survanta Treatment(CAST)of RDS in Very Premature Infants

PrematurityRespiratory Distress Syndrome1 more

Approval of surfactant by the FDA in 1989 for the treatment of Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS) in premature infants greatly improved survival rates. Newer surfactants approved by the FDA were more concentrated and had a more rapid onset of action. The overall efficacy of newer surfactants appeared similar until in 2004, Ramanathan and colleagues suggested that a double dose of Curosurf improved survival in infants 25-32 weeks gestational age, compared to infants treated with Survanta, the most commonly used surfactant preparation in the United States. While the data was suggestive, it was not clear that the improvement in survival was reproducible or that Curosurf was responsible for the improved survival rates. The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of Curosurf in improving lung function and survival rates and reducing the complications of prematurity in very premature infants < 30 weeks gestational age at birth.

Terminated11 enrollment criteria

Activated Protein C to Treat Acute Lung Injuries

Respiratory Distress SyndromeAdult

The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of activated Protein C (Xigris) for improving clinical outcomes in individuals with acute lung injury (ALI).

Terminated38 enrollment criteria

Early Inhaled Nitric Oxide for Respiratory Failure in Newborns

InfantNewborn8 more

This prospective, randomized controlled trial tested whether initiating iNO therapy earlier would reduce death and reduce the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) -- temporary lung bypass -- therapy compared with the standard recommendation threshold. Infants who were born at >34 weeks' gestation were enrolled when they required assisted ventilation and had an oxygenation index (OI) >15 and <25 on any 2 measurements in a 12-hour interval. Infants were randomized to receive either early iNO or to simulated initiation of iNO (control). Infants who had an increase in OI to 25 or more were given iNO as standard therapy. The neurodevelopment of the subjects were evaluated at 18-22 months corrected age.

Terminated10 enrollment criteria

RENOVATE Fibrosis:HFNC Versus NIPPV in Acute Respiratory Failure in Patients With Pulmonary Fibrosis...

Acute Respiratory FailurePulmonary Fibrosis

A pilot multicentric randomized controlled study investigating the feasibility of recruiting 50 pulmonary fibrosis patients in acute respiratory failure within18 months. Additionally, exploratory efficacy and safety outcomes will be evaluated.

Terminated19 enrollment criteria

Inhaled Steroids for the Treatment of Early Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

The purpose of this study is to show that inhaled steroids in patient with PARDS can decrease the days on mechanical ventilator measured by ventilator-free days,to improve the oxygenation index (OI) or oxygenation saturation index (OSI) in patients receiving inhaled steroids and to show the relevance and feasibility of a larger study by assessing the hypothesis in a small cohort of patients. Patient will be treated for a maximum of 10 days. Secondary objectives are to reduce the length of stay (LOS) in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) and hospital admissions; to show less inflammation in the patients receiving inhaled steroids by measuring inflammatory markers from tracheal aspirates like Interleukin (IL6, IL8, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α, matrix metalloproteinase8 (MMP8) and matrix metalloproteinase9 (MMP9). Lastly, to show that inhaled steroids can improve residual lung disease evaluated by Pulmonary Function Test (PFTs) and Impulse Oscillometry (IOS).

Terminated7 enrollment criteria
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