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Active clinical trials for "Sleep Apnea Syndromes"

Results 1121-1130 of 2072

Comparison of Breathing Event Detection by a Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Device to Clinical...

Sleep Apnea

The study is to compare the performance of a CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) device to a clinical polysomnography (PSG) in identifying breathing events in patients with obstructive sleep apnea.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Stair Stepping Exercise Training in Patients With Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome

Sleep Apnea Syndrome

This 3-year prospective, randomized, control, longitudinal study is aimed to (1) examine the effect of stair stepping exercise training on cardiopulmonary fitness and sleep situation in patients with Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome (OSAS), and (2) follow the longitudinal change after stair stepping exercise training in patients with OSAS. Patients meet the following criteria will be invited to participate in this study: being diagnosed with AHI (Apnea-hypopnea index)>15/hr and ODI (oxygen desaturation index)>10/hr by Polysomnography, aged 19 or older. Based on the power analysis, 70 patients with OSAS treated in the outpatient department of Chang Gung Medical Center will be recruited over a period of 26 months. Each patient will participate in this study for seventeen weeks. Patients will be randomly assigned to receive stair stepping exercise in addition to nursing education and standard care, or nursing education and standard care alone. Stair stepping exercise will be performed at home daily for eight weeks. Outcomes will be determined by changes in the scores of cardiopulmonary fitness index, VO2max, six-minute walking distance, daytime sleepiness measured by Epworth Sleepiness Scale, sleep time measured by Actigraphy, and AHI measured by Polysomnography; those taken four times: before treatment (baseline), five weeks, nine weeks, and seventeen weeks of the study. Data will be analyzed using descriptive statistics and Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE).

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Ezopiclone Improves the Quality of Overnight Polysomnography

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Patients often have difficulty sleeping during overnight sleep testing in a lab environment. The purpose of this study is to determine if taking a sleep aid will improve sleep and therefore the quality of the sleep study.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Fat Gain and Cardiovascular Disease Mechanisms

HypertensionSleep Apnea Syndromes1 more

Understanding the mechanisms of obesity-induced hypertension is important both for prevention and therapy. Studies of patients with established obesity have provided valuable information on pathophysiologic links between obesity and both blood pressure and cardiovascular risk. However, these studies are necessarily limited by the heterogeneity of obesity-associated disease so that the relative contribution of obesity or hypertension or other co-existing diseases to specific regulatory abnormalities is often not clear. Clarification of whether any abnormalities associated with increased cardiovascular risk were present before or after the development of obesity has also been problematic. We therefore propose a series of novel studies directed at establishing the effects of increased body fat in otherwise healthy individuals. We will determine the distribution patterns of increased body fat and how both increased body fat and fat distribution relate to changes in blood pressure, and in neural, endothelial and inflammatory mechanisms which have been implicated in the development and progression of cardiac and vascular disease. We will study non-obese subjects with and without a family history of hypertension. These subjects will undergo an eight-week program of overfeeding with the objective of inducing a 4 kg fat gain. We will determine the nature of fat distribution in these individuals after the fat gain program and subsequently after an eight-week period of weight loss and restoration of normal body weight. Measurements will be compared to those obtained in a matched control group with and without a family history of hypertension, who will continue their normal diets. We will test the following hypotheses: Individuals with a family history of hypertension will gain more visceral fat and upper body subcutaneous fat and will have greater blood pressure increases with overfeeding- compared with those without such a family history. For all overfed subjects, increases in blood pressure and insulin resistance with fat gain will be most marked in those individuals with a predominantly upper body and visceral fat accumulation. Upper body and visceral fat gain will also be associated with greater impairment in cardiovascular function, higher nocturnal blood pressures and an increased likelihood of sleep disordered breathing.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

BASET Scoring: A Novel Simple Biometric Score and Potential Tool for Diagnosis and Grading of Obstructive...

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

this study aims to assess the validity of BASET scoring as a new potential tool for diagnosis and grading the severity of OSAS patients and as screening of the risk factors of OSAS.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Screening of Sleep Apnea by Holter Electrocardiography: Validation of Heart Rate Variability Analysis...

Sleep Apnea Syndromes

Obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) is a growing health concern affecting up to 60 % of population with cardiovascular disease. Despite the high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality associated with this syndrome, the substantial inconvenience and cost of polysomnography recordings may delay routine evaluation. Polysomnography (PSG) is the gold standard for diagnosis. However, this is a costly and time-consuming examination. Sympathoadrenergic balance obtained from the routine Holter monitoring suggesting the presence of OSAS, can enable patients to be guided and their PSGs to be primarily held.Abnormalities in nocturnal cyclical heart rate (HR) variations have previously been described in sleep-related breathing disorders. Compared with PSG, holter electrocardiogram has the advantages of pervasion, lower cost, no need for overnight hospitalization, greater similarity to normal conditions, and good compliance. The observation of changes in heart rate associated with apneic events has a potential to be used as an alternative technique for identification of subjects with OSAS. In regard to the feasibility of screening OSAS by HRV analysis by holter electrocardiogram monitoring, it has already been reported that a 24-h electrocardiographic monitoring might be useful to diagnose OSAS. It became a more feasible technique to use following the development of a convenient recorder for OSAS screening by analyzing changes in heart rate.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

The Sunrise OSA Trial

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

A prospective, randomised, blinded pilot study comparing the Sunrise solution and overnight polygraphy for the diagnosis of OSA in adult patients. Patients under investigation for OSA will use both devices simultaneously for a single overnight sleep study. They will be randomised to receive their treatment decision based on either the Sunrise solution or polygraphy. A retrospective check of their diagnosis will be done.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

A Validation Study of the NightOwl PAT-based Home Sleep Apnea Test

Sleep Apnea

The objective of this study is to evaluate the performance of a miniaturized sleep apnea test, called NightOwl. The system consists of a sensor placed on the fingertip and a cloud-based analytics software. The sensor acquires accelerometer and photoplethysmographic data. The software derives actigraphy from the former, and blood oxygen saturation and peripheral arterial tone (PAT), among other features, from the latter. In order to assess NightOwl's performance, the investigators will compare the respiratory event index (REI), defined as the number of respiratory events per hour of sleep, derived by the NightOwl system, to the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) obtained from manual analysis of the polysomnography (PSG), which is the gold standard for sleep apnea diagnosis. The investigators will also compare the total sleep time (TST) derived by both systems. This study will be performed in a sleep lab environment.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Recruitment Strategies Comparing Different Strategies in Sleep Apnea and Prediabetes

Sleep DisorderPre Diabetes1 more

Recruitment strategies comparing different strategies.

Completed24 enrollment criteria

OSA and Sudden Sensorineural Hearing Loss

Obstructive Sleep ApneaSudden Hearing Loss

This study studies the prevalence between obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and sensorineural hearing loss. We recruit patients who have been treated for sudden sensorineural hearing loss in Poitiers' University Hospital between 2010 et 2017, and we detect if they have OSA with a ventilatory polygraphy.

Completed3 enrollment criteria
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