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Active clinical trials for "Apnea"

Results 261-270 of 1467

Montelukast for Patients With Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome

Sleep ApneaObstructive

This study compares the effect of Montelukast vs Placebo on Flow Mediated Dilatation of the Brachial Artery (FMD) in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome.

Terminated18 enrollment criteria

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Airway Evaluation

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Current practice guidelines recommend obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) patients to stay in the post anesthetic care unit (PACU) until the risk of respiratory depression has subsided. Inevitably, a greater demand on hospital resource utilization in these patients will increase health care cost. Polysomnography (PSG) and screening questionnaires can identify OSA but they are limited by accessibility and false positive results, respectively. Inaccurate OSA identification misguides postoperative surveillance plan. In contrast with MRI and CT scans, ultrasound is more accessible and more likely a practical tool for OSA screening. However, before clinical application, airway ultrasound (US) exam must undergo vigorous testing to check its utility, accuracy, inter-observer reliability and its ability to identify OSA and its severity.

Active10 enrollment criteria

Effect of an Aerobic Exercise Program in Patients With Moderate-severe Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea Hypopnea SyndromePhysical Activity

In this paper, it is postulated that in sedentary patients with moderate-severe sleep apnea diagnosed by a sleep test, an increase in physical activity stimulated by the use of a pedometer during a period of 6 months can reduce the severity of OSAS by decreasing the number of respiratory events during sleep and when controlling for vascular risk factors.

Terminated5 enrollment criteria

Combination Therapy Associating CPAP and Mandibular Advancement Device in OSA

Obstructive Sleep Apnea SyndromeHypertension

The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of a combination of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) and a Mandibular Advancement Device (MAD) on nocturnal Blood Pressure control in hypertensive patients in obstructive sleep apnea low CPAP compliers (less than 4 hours per night). Hypertensive patients demonstrating low CPAP adherence will be selected during a screening visit; they will be then randomized to one of the three following arms: Education to CPAP ("CPAP only"), Treatment by a MAD ("MAD only") or a combination of both CPAP and MAD ("CPAP+MAD"). Mean systolic, diastolic, diurnal and nocturnal blood pressure will be assessed during 24-h Ambulatory Blood Pressure monitoring, before and after a 3-month treatment intervention. Biological laboratory parameters, patients reported outcomes (daytime sleepiness and Quality of Life), will also be evaluated before and after 3 months of treatment.

Terminated10 enrollment criteria

Endothelial Damage and Atherosclerosis in Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Obstructive Sleep ApneaInsulin Resistance2 more

The investigators hypothesize that obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) may lead to increased formation/accumulation of advanced glycation ends (AGEs), and that the increase in AGEs is contributed in part by increased insulin resistance. The investigators further hypothesize that AGEs contribute to vascular endothelial damage and ultimately atherosclerosis in OSA. The objectives of this study are: To explore the relationship between insulin resistance and AGEs in OSA To study the relationship between AGE and vascular endothelial dysfunction in OSA To study the relationship between AGE and early atherosclerosis in OSA

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

Caffeine in Children With Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Dose Response Study

Obstructive Sleep ApneaEnlargement of Tonsil or Adenoid

The aim of this study is to evaluate whether a smaller dose of caffeine sodium benzoate 10 mg/kg IV is as effective as 20 mg/kg IV in decreasing the number of children who develop post extubation adverse upper airway respiratory events compared to placebo.

Terminated2 enrollment criteria

Effects of Nocturnal Nasal Oxygen on Biomarkers in Sleep Apnea Patients With Heart Failure

Sleep ApneaHeart Failure

Sleep apnea syndrome is clinically defined by frequent pauses in breathing during sleep and symptoms, such as being tired. It can decrease the restfulness of sleep and decreases the level of oxygen in the blood. Sleep apnea patients suffer from daytime sleepiness, hypertension, coronary artery disease (CAD), stroke, ischemic heart disease, arrhythmias, pulmonary hypertension, heart failure, and premature death. There is significant evidence suggesting that nighttime decreases in blood oxygen levels are the primary cause of many of the abnormalities associated with this disease. Epidemiological studies have demonstrated a surprisingly high prevalence of sleep apnea. Mild sleep apnea is present in 17% of adults in the general population and moderate to severe sleep apnea is present in 5.7% of adults. Among patients with heart failure the prevalence skyrockets. Multiple studies have found the prevalence of moderate to severe sleep apnea to be anywhere from 11-53% in heart failure patients. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy is currently the standard of care for sleep apnea sufferers regardless of the severity of their disease. In patients without heart failure, CPAP therapy has numerous benefits and several long term studies have reported that CPAP causes less cardiovascular disease as well as a long term improvement in cardiovascular symptoms and mortality among patient with severe sleep apnea. In heart failure patients, CPAP has shown some beneficial short term effects but evidence of long term improvements in symptoms and mortality are lacking. Compliance with CPAP therapy reduces systolic blood pressure, improves cardiac function, raises oxygen levels, and increases exercise tolerance. On the other hand, CPAP has not been shown to affect survival or number of hospitalizations in heart failure patients. Moreover, compliance with CPAP is often poor and many people cannot tolerate it. This further limits the therapeutic effectiveness of this intervention. The purpose of this study is to assess whether nocturnal oxygen administration via nasal cannula alone can improve outcomes in congestive heart failure patients with moderate to severe sleep apnea. The effects of nocturnal oxygen administration will be assessed by using biomarkers of heart stress and markers of whole body inflammation.

Terminated9 enrollment criteria

Effect of Dupilumab on Sleep Apnea in Patients With Rhinosinusitis

Sleep ApneaRhinosinusitis Chronic

Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) is a common disorder with serious consequences that remains underrecognized, with >80% of OSA patients undiagnosed, and undertreated due to inadequate treatment options. The development of additional treatments for OSA, such as pharmacotherapy, are critically needed. The collaboration between Regeneron and Sanofi are funding this project. Regeneron will be providing the drug and the contract will be with Regeneron. Both companies are involved as it is a collaboration across the companies.

Terminated18 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Its Treatment on Decision Making

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is an extremely common disease with inadequately explored neurocognitive consequences. The investigators will study OSA patients before and after treatment to understand how OSA changes decision making abilities, and whether treatment can reverse such cognitive changes. These results could provide deeper insight into how OSA affects decision making either temporarily or permanently, and provide another rationale or motivation for treatment of OSA in adults.

Active10 enrollment criteria

Surgical Treatment of Children With OSA and Small Tonsils or Down Syndrome

Obstructive Sleep Apnea of Child

The purpose of this study is to prospectively compare the effectiveness of a novel personalized approach to the surgical treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in children, drug induced sleep endoscopy (DISE) directed surgery versus the standard adenotonsillectomy (AT). This will also serve to test the feasibility of recruiting families for a future randomized protocol comparing the same surgical techniques. It is the investigators' central hypothesis that a personalized DISE-directed surgical approach that uses existing procedures to address the specific fixed and dynamic anatomic features causing obstruction (ie, anatomic endotypes) in each child with small tonsils or Down syndrome will be superior to the currently recommended standard first line approach of AT. This novel approach may improve OSA outcomes and reduce the burden of unnecessary AT or secondary surgery for persistent OSA after an ineffective AT. To test this hypothesis, the investigators will study children aged 2 to 18 years with clinically small tonsils (Brodsky score 1+ or 2+ on a scale 1+ to 4+) OR Down syndrome.

Active5 enrollment criteria
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