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Active clinical trials for "Asthma"

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Telemonitoring of Lung Function by Spirometry

Asthma in ChildrenAsthma

Asthma is the most common respiratory disorder in children that causes breathing problems. The patients may have respiratory symptoms such as cough, wheeze, or short of breath. Asthma can be mild or severe when daily activities become compromised. Generally, by application of proper treatment, asthma symptoms can be well controlled. However, the exacerbation of the disease often leads to acute respiratory adverse events that require hospitalization and school absenteeism. In this study, we plan the remote monitoring of lung function parameters in asthmatic children (under 18 years of age). We hypothesize that the daily home monitoring of respiratory indices will predict the occurrence of exacerbation and the hospitalization can be lowered. Asthmatic children arriving for the regular examinations to the Department of Pediatrics and Pediatric Health Care Center of the University of Szeged will be involved. The patients are randomly divided into two treatment groups, telemonitoring and control. For both groups, general patient characteristics will be recorded, and lung function parameters will be measured with a clinical spirometer. Patients in the telemedicine group receive the home mobile controlled spirometer and trained by a pediatric pulmonologist for home examination. The spirometers are handed for 12 months, and children are asked to perform measurements minimum 4 times per week (at least one day a week in the morning and in the evening). In the case of asthma attacks, more frequent measurements repeated several times a day are required. Children in the telemedicine group complete the Asthma Control Test (ACT) after each measurement, which provides a numerical score related to the severity of asthma symptoms. Lung function parameters measured by children and the ACT results are automatically uploaded to a clinical server where the pulmonologists and built-in algorithms are monitoring the quality of the data. In case of deterioration of the lung function parameters, the patients are called for a personal visit and their treatment can be revised. Every three months, members of both groups come to the outpatient clinic for a personal visit, where the same examinations are performed.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Bronchial Thermoplasty: Effect on Neuronal and Chemosensitive Component of the Bronchial Mucosa...

Severe Persistent Asthma

In severe bronchial asthma the mechanism of inflammation and bronchospasm is complex and still not clarified. The smooth muscle cells play an important role from the mechanical point of view, as a culmination of neurogenic stimuli and inflammatory cytokines that determine as final effect the bronchospasm and over time a hypertrophy of the muscular coat. There are some other hypothesis that the smooth muscle cells may play a role as central regulator of chemical mediators that cause bronchospasm and inflammation, although there are currently no firm conclusions 2 According to other studies3,the nerve receptors TRANSIENT RECEPTOR POTENTIAL VANILLOID TYPE 1 have a great importance in the complex mechanism of airway inflammation too. (There are at least 4) These receptors would intervene according to the following mechanism: Irritants on the bronchial mucosa stimulate the TRANSIENT RECEPTOR POTENTIAL VANILLOID TYPE 1 present on afferent endings of sensory fibers, unmyelinated C (chemiosensitive neurons) On the same afferent axon acting factors with the activation effect (lowering the activation threshold, increase the expression, promote the translocation of TRPV1 receptor on the membrane). Among these factors the neurotrophins of which the most important NERVE GROWTH FACTOR (NGF) The activation of TRPV1 (through release of Ca2 + +) determines two efferent responses: CENTRALLY-MEDIATED LOCAL AXON Reflex Investigators hypothesized that BT may have a strong influence on the destruction of nerve receptors TRPV1 and unmyelinated nerve fibers located in the mucosa going to stop reflections both central and local authorities responsible for the activation of bronchospasm. In support of this hypothesis, there are some anatomical studies4, which show that these receptors are more numerous at the level of main bronchi which are the main target of BT. Please note in this context that it is already known that in thermoablations commonly used in cardiology it is used a radio frequency with development of heat controlled to 65 °, as in the BT, able to interrupt the circuit nervous responsible for the activation of the circuit causing the abnormal 'arrhythmia.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Guidelines to Practice: Reducing Asthma Health Disparities Through Guideline Implementation

Asthma

The primary hypothesis the investigators will test is that that improving asthma guideline implementation and providing patients with a unified asthma management plan using a multi-component and multilevel intervention will improve patient-centered asthma outcomes compared to health plan case management, passive guideline dissemination and provider education.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Role of Extracellular Matrix in the Development of Airway Remodeling in Asthma

Allergic AsthmaAirway Remodelling1 more

Asthma is a major noncommunicable chronic inflammatory disorder which is characterized by airway inflammation and related to pathological modifications of the bronchial wall structure so called airway remodeling. Airway remodeling seen in asthma is mainly described by epithelial changes, subepithelial fibrosis, increased airway smooth muscle (ASM) mass, decreased distance between ASM and epithelium, mucous gland and goblet cell hyperplasia, vascular changes and edema. Near these well known pathophysiological changes of the airways, the extracellular matrix (ECM) can be distinguished as a new important factor included in development of airway remodeling in asthma.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Helping Chicago's Westside Adults Breathe and Thrive

Asthma

Adults with asthma living in Chicago's West and Southwest side who completed the home-based Community Health Worker (CHW) intervention called Helping Chicago's Westside Adults Breathe and Thrive (HCWABT I) after October 2015 were eligible to participate in a randomized control trial called HCWABT II, which will evaluate the long-term impact of the intervention on their asthma control, asthma severity, healthcare use, and asthma-related quality of life. Participants are randomly assigned to an intervention arm, where they continue to receive occasional (monthly or bimonthly) contact from the CHW who served them during HCWABT I. or a control arm, where they no longer receive contact from the CHW. Members of both groups receive monthly data collection calls from a Research Assistant. We hypothesize that participants in the control arm will experience sustained improvements in asthma outcomes as compared to their pre-HCWABT I levels and that participants in the CHW intervention arm will continue to improve in asthma control severity, quality of life, and healthcare use.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Appropriate Inhaler Use of Tiotropium as add-on Therapy in Symptomatic Asthma

Asthma

This pragmatic, two-arm, randomized controlled trial study aim to survey the inhaler errors of add-on tiotropium therapy with ICS+LABA in real-world practice of asthma patients and the efficacy of recheck stratage of inhaler skills. Patient characteristics and inflammatory features will be evaluated prospectively for association of asthma control by add-on tiotropium.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

CysLT1-r Expression Following Allergen Exposure in Asthma and Allergic Rhinitis

AsthmaAllergic Rhinitis

Cysteinyl leukotrienes (CysLTs) play an important role in asthma. CysLTs exert most of their bronchoconstrictive and pro-inflammatory effects through activation of the CysLT1-r. As allergic rhinitis appears to be a predisposing factor in the development of asthma and as CysLT-receptors seem to be implicated in the first steps of asthma manifestations, we think it would be of interest to determine if the CysLT1-r is a key mediator in the progression from allergic rhinitis to asthma. We believe it would be interesting to study the expression of the CysLT1-r Our goal is to assess baseline, as well as variations following allergen bronchoprovocations, in the expression of the CysLT1-r in mild asthmatic subjects compared with non asthmatic subjects with allergic rhinitis. Our hypothesis is that there will be a higher baseline expression of the CysLT1-r in asthmatic subjects compared with allergic rhinitis subjects and that allergen bronchoprovocations will induce an increase in the expression of the CysLT1-r in both groups.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Assessment of Airway Responsiveness and Treatment Efficacy in Asthmatics

Asthma

Bronchial asthma is a common chronic respiratory disease. Patients usually manifest variable symptoms (such as short of breath, chest tightness, cough, etc.) and variable airflow limitation and often associated with airway hyper-responsiveness and airway inflammation. About 1-18% of the global population suffered from the disease, causing huge economic burden for patients and countries. Airway reactivity measurement is an important way of diagnosis of asthma. Methacholine (Mch) bronchial provocation test(BPT) is the "gold standard" for the determination of airway reactivity, and other measuring methods(like adenosine monophosphate(AMP)-BPT, leukotriene D4(LTD4)-BPT, Astograph-BPT, etc.) were also brought into hot research fields. The investigators' purposes were to compare different kinds of methodologies(Mch,AMP,LTD4-BPT, Astograph-BPT) assessing airway responsiveness and to investigate treatment efficacy of budesonide /formoterol in asthmatics.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Asthma Self-management Via Application of Telehealth

AsthmaMixed Asthma With Acute Exacerbation

Objectives: The disease being studied is asthma. The main objective of this study is to assess the feasibility of the recruitment goals and also the logistical issues related to use of tele-health technology in developing electronic asthma action plan (eAAP) and communicate with asthma patients in a time period of 24 months. The goals are: 1) enable asthma patients to self-manage their asthma symptoms. The secondary, 2) help care providers to intervene appropriately based on the patient's health status. The secondary objective is to explore the cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness of the proposed technology. Our research group proposes to complete a feasibility study, with an interim analysis for a formal power calculation and then acquire ethics to report these results and study design with anticipated publication prior to proceeding with a full randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of this intervention. The outcome measure will be assessed and data will be presented in a 24-month time frame. Aims and goals: The main aim of our proposed study is to assist asthma patients to practice asthma self-management at home that will eventually enable them to control their asthma, and specifically, prevent asthma exacerbation. Therefore, the ultimate goal of our proposed study is to improve patient health outcome via enhancing patient-physician interaction and using a more practical asthma action plan model (eAAP) that could be followed easily by the patient and their doctor. Our hypothesis is that asthma patients who have access to the electronic online action plan complimented by weekly text messages to reinforce adherence will have a reduced rate of asthma exacerbation. We further hypothesize that these subjects will have an improvement in secondary measures including quality of life, better asthma control and patient satisfaction. We also anticipate that such an approach in asthma management will be cost-effective as outlined below.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

A Mechanistic Study to Evaluate the Efficacy of Montelukast on Airway Function in Asthma

Asthma

The trial is an investigator-driven research study in subjects with intermittent asthma, the aim of which is to explore the likelihood of a functionally important separate leukotriene E4 (LTE4) receptor in airways and/or inflammatory cells in human subjects with asthma. Mostly on the basis of experiments in mice models, the prevailing view suggests that the present class of anti-leukotriene drugs are insufficient because they do not block the pro-inflammatory and bronchoconstrictive effects of LTE4. It is established by us and other groups that LTE4 is the most stable and long-lived leukotriene. The study will establish the effect of oral treatment with the highly selective CysLT1-receptor antagonist, montelukast, on bronchial responsiveness to inhaled LTE4 in subjects with intermittent asthma

Unknown status24 enrollment criteria
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