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Active clinical trials for "Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive"

Results 2131-2140 of 3300

Effect of Education and Tele-consultancy Intervention Based on Watson Human Care Theory Individuals...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseSelf Efficacy3 more

This study aims to investigate the effect of education and tele-consultancy intervention based on Watson's Human Care Theory on self-efficacy and quality of life of individuals with COPD.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Physical Capacity of Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease With and Without Supplementation...

Pulmonary DiseaseChronic Obstructive2 more

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is characterized by obstruction to pulmonary airflow and dyspnea. These characteristics are a consequence of exposure to harmful gases and particles that lead to oxidative stress in the lungs together with an exaggerated inflammatory response. In addition to respiratory impairment, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease has systemic manifestations, nutritional alterations, and exercise limitation. Pulmonary rehabilitation is one of the most effective interventions in the treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, with one goal being to improve patient capacity. Whey protein supplementation, concomitant with physical activity for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, aims to stimulate protein synthesis and decrease muscle catabolism that may be caused by exercise. The investigators aimed to evaluate the effects of whey protein supplementation supplementation on the physical capacity, body composition and tissue functionality of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in a pulmonary rehabilitation program.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Mind-Body Walking Exercise for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseExercise5 more

Mind-body exercise improves symptom of negative moods, dyspnea and quality of life in chronic diseases, but these improvements for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are unproven. This study aims to examine the effects of dyspnea, exercise capacity, heart rate variability(HRV), anxiety, depression, interoceptive awareness, quality of life(QoL) in patients with COPD across a three-month mind-body exercise program.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Rehabilitation for Patients With COPD

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

This study will examine COPD Wellness, a 10-week low-intensity pulmonary rehabilitation program consisting of group and home exercise, education, and social support can improve symptoms and increase physical activity in participants with COPD who receive care within a 'safety-net' healthcare system (e.g. County Hospital). Half of the participants will also receive an adherence strategy targeted at addressing unmet social needs, while the other half will undergo the intervention without the adherence strategy.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Cognitive and Behavioral Intervention for the Management of Episodic Breathlessness in Patients...

DyspneaRespiratory Insufficiency10 more

Episodic breathlessness is a common and distressing symptom in patients with advanced disease such as cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and chronic heart failure. Since the short duration of the majority of breathless episodes limits the effectiveness of pharmacological interventions (e.g. opioids), non-pharmacological management strategies play a major role. As non-pharmacological strategies patients use, for example, cognitive and behavioural methods such as breathing or relaxation techniques. The aim of the study is to test a brief cognitive and behavioural intervention for an improved management of episodic breathlessness. Initially, a Delphi procedure with international experts has been used to develop the brief intervention consisting of various non-pharmacological strategies to enhance the management of breathless episodes. In the single-arm therapeutic exploratory trial (phase II), the feasibility and potential effects of the brief intervention, such as patient-reported breathlessness mastery, episodic breathlessness characteristics, quality of life, symptom burden, caregivers' burden, and breathlessness in general will be examined. The results of the study form the basis for planning and implementing a subsequent confirmatory randomized control trial (phase III).

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Determining the Feasibility of Implementing a Combined Cognitive and Exercise Training Program for...

Osteo ArthritisOsteoporosis7 more

The overarching aim of this project is to implement and evaluate a proven cognitive training regimen in combination with a community exercise program among older adults who attend wellness exercise programs at the YMCA. To support this aim, the investigators have developed a collaboration with the YMCA of Kitchener-Waterloo, which offer exercise programs targeted to older adults. The specific objectives are: (1) to evaluate the feasibility of a combined exercise and cognitive training in a community-setting among older adults; and (2) to conduct a preliminary evaluation and comparison of changes in cognitive function, physical function, well-being and self-efficacy with 12-weeks of combined exercise and cognitive training versus exercise alone. The hypothesis for each objective are as follows: (1) It is anticipated that this program will be feasible to implement and will be well accepted by the participants and exercise providers. (2) The investigators may not have the power to find statistically significant differences between the control and experimental groups for physical and cognitive function. However, the investigators expect to observe positive changes between the pre- and post-assessments, suggesting improved cognitive function and mobility as a result of the 12-week program.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Explore the Sharing Model Intervene to Improve the Knowledge, Attitudes, Service Intentions and...

Alzheimer DiseaseLate Onset10 more

Since September 1st, 2009, Taiwan has begun to pay attention to the care of patients with organ failure, dementia and the elderly, and brought eight of non-cancer terminal patients into health insurance subsidies to implement the goal of universal palliative care and local aging. Taiwan has entered the aged society since March 2018, become the heavy burden of expenditure in Taiwan because of the health care needs and costs associated with the rapid aging of the population. With advanced medical technology, when facing inevitable death situation, should not use too much medical treatment on terminally ill patients. The waste of medical resources and bring both patients and family members so much pain. In Taiwan, people have misconception about tranquil palliative care. The low rate of home palliative care for non-terminal cancer patients. The purpose of this study is investigating the eight non-cancer terminal caregivers' knowledge, attitudes and service intentions of palliative care, and getting the result by research intervention. In this study, a randomized experimental research design was applied by two-group pre-and post-test. The targets are the eight non-cancer terminal caregivers in a home care institution of a regional teaching hospital located in Yilan. Targets' ID end with odd numbers are in experimental group received shared mode intervention, and even numbers are in control group received home routine care. The experimental group was implementing measures of weekly shared mode intervention in 20 to 60 minutes for six weeks; the control group started to implement measures of home care medical instructions booklet in the third week. The content of the outcome measurement questionnaire includes: basic information of the eight non-cancer terminal caregivers, the palliative care knowledge scale, the palliative care attitude scale, and palliative care service initiation intention scale. Data were analyzed by statistical methods such as descriptive analysis, independent sample t-test, paired-samples t-test, Pearson correlation analysis and one-way ANOVA.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Safety and Tolerability of MEDI3506 in Healthy Participants, in Participants With COPD and Healthy...

Part I (SAD) - Healthy ParticipantsPart II (MAD) - Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease1 more

This is a Phase 1, randomised, blinded, placebo controlled, study designed to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and immunogenicity response to single and multiple doses of MEDI3506.

Completed35 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Distractive Auditory Stimuli (Music) on Dyspnea and Anxiety During Exercise in Adults...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The objective of this study is to look at the effects of distractive auditory stimuli (DAS) on reducing dyspnea intensity and related anxiety and increasing exercise tolerance. Investigators hope that compared to a no-music control condition, that under a music condition participants with COPD will (a) demonstrate increased self-paced walk distance and enjoyment; (b) have less dyspnea intensity, (c) experience less dyspnea anxiety; (d) have less fatigue and state anxiety; and (e) higher maximum heart rate. The upbeat music with a tempo of 90 - 100 bpm (an average-to-moderate walking tempo) is expected to have distractive and performance enhancing effects in order to increase tolerance to dyspnea and exercise. The long-term goal of this study is to increase physical activity in adults with COPD and RLD by promoting dyspnea and fatigue management through use of distractive auditory stimuli in the form of music.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Impact of Feedback on Physical Activity and Health-related Outcomes During Pulmonary Rehabilitation...

Pulmonary DiseaseChronic Obstructive

The aim of this study is to investigate whether providing feedback on physical activity (PA) levels to patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is feasible and enhances daily PA and health-related outcomes during pulmonary rehabilitation (PR). Patients will participate in a 12-week PR program and a PA-focused intervention. Patients' daily PA will be monitored during the first (W1), seventh (W7) and 12th (W12) weeks of the PR program using the activity monitors GT3X+ (ActiGraph, Pensacola, FL) and feedback will be given to them in the following weeks. Each participant will also receive individualised recommendations to improve or maintain their PA levels, based on the results of the previous week. It is expected that, by receiving individualised feedback and goals regarding their PA levels during the PR program, patients with COPD will become more active and improve their health-related outcomes.

Completed5 enrollment criteria
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