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Active clinical trials for "Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive"

Results 3171-3180 of 3300

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Monitoring

COPDCOPD Exacerbation

The present feasibility study aims at assessing whether the EMG of respiratory muscles can serve as an objective marker of dyspnea in COPD patients. The study aims also at evaluating the changes in physiological parameters (i.e., EMG, respiration rate, heart rate, temperature, and SpO2) occurring when simulating daily activities before, during and after acute exacerbations. All this information can be useful to detect the exacerbations earlier or to provide better treatment during the exacerbations.

Unknown status18 enrollment criteria

Screening and Early Warning of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Combined With Sleep Respiratory...

COPDOsa Syndrome

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a common disease that endangers people's health, causing severe economic and treatment burdens. Sleep breathing disease, as a complication of COPD, increases the hospitalization rate and mortality of COPD. At present, community doctors have insufficient knowledge of COPD and its complications, and they also lack standardized screening and related disease management capabilities. This trail intends to use IoT medical technology to screen for COPD combined with sleep breathing diseases. It can establish a two-way referral channel between primary community hospitals and higher-level hospitals, which provides early warning services for COPD combined with sleep breathing diseases. This trial explores the impact of sleep breathing disease on COPD's acute exacerbation, which improves the understanding of COPD patients combined with sleep breathing diseases. It also improves COPD management and its complications control at the community-level and reduces COPD patients' potential risks and treatment burdens. It also explores tiered diagnosis and treatment models for COPD, promotes the construction of intelligent IoT infrastructure, and enhances standardized diagnosis and treatment of COPD at the grassroots level in China.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

A Study on Smoking-related Lung Function Abnormalities and Correlation With Serum Biomarkers in...

Chronic Airflow Obstruction

Tobacco-smoking causes lung function decline with airflow obstruction, which may be accelerated in persistent smokers.This would eventually lead to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in Hong Kong and globally. Lung function decline is gradual and not appreciated by the smoker until damage is advanced, and often under-recognised in the early stages of disease by healthcare providers. Spirometry is an established lung function measurement tool, and the most simple objective method to detect lung function decline. There is literature suggesting that newer spirometric parameters, FEV3 and FEV6, which are easier to achieve in the measurement process than conventional parameters, are comparable alternatives in detecting lung function decline. The aims of this study are: to evaluate and compare lung function decline in persistent smokers and non-smokers to study the usefulness of FEV3/FVC and FEV1/FEV6 in detecting lung function decline to correlate symptom scores with lung function parameters To correlate serum biomarker levels with respiratory symptoms and lung function parameters in smokers and non-smokers This is a follow-up study on a territory wide cohort including smokers and non-smokers, who have undergone lung function testing in 2001-03. Subjects will be invited to have repeat lung function assessment. The hypotheses of this study are: smokers have significantly greater decline in lung function compared to non-smokers in Hong Kong Chinese; newer lung function parameters are useful alternatives in detecting lung function decline serum inflammatory biomarker (IL-8, TGF-β, MMP9, TIMP-1, CRP) levels correlate with respiratory symptoms and lung function parameters in smokers when compared with non-smokers

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

Responses Induced by Smoking in Individuals Being Susceptible and Non-Susceptible for Development...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

COPD is ranked number 3 by the WHO list of important diseases worldwide and is the only disease with increasing mortality. The pathogenesis of cigarette smoke-induced COPD is obscure, therefore more insight is needed to design effective anti-inflammatory agents. We hypothesize that healthy individuals who are susceptible to smoking demonstrate a higher and aberrant inflammatory response to cigarette smoke. This susceptibility is caused by heterogeneous factors and is associated with various polymorphic genes that interact with each other and with the environment. Objective: To define mediators involved in the early induction of COPD in susceptible smokers (and so to define new drug targets) To develop new biological and clinical markers for the early diagnosis and monitoring of COPD To compare between susceptible and non-susceptible individuals the corticosteroid responsiveness of bronchial epithelial cells in vitro, and to study the mechanisms of smoking-induced corticosteroid unresponsiveness. To study the role of candidate genes that may play a role in the development of fixed airway obstruction, and to identify clues for patient's responsiveness to specific drugs.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

The Canadian Cohort Obstructive Lung Disease

COPDChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Abstract Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the fourth leading cause of death in Canada. COPD is not just a disease of men, nor is it solely a disease in old age. Women have been underrepresented and early disease has not been studied. Underdiagnosis of COPD remains a significant problem, and it may indicate an unmet healthcare need. This can potentially results not only in a patient been misinformed, but can lead to incorrect management. Epidemiological research is needed to develop a framework to combat this major health problem, by better characterization of the population of men and women at risk and patients with early disease, by better understanding which factors modifiable through health interventions are related to health perception (health-related quality of life) and disease evolution. This will be possible through a nationwide study, the Canadian Cohort Obstructive Lung disease (CanCOLD), a prospective longitudinal study. The CanCOLD study is built on the current ongoing prevalence nationwide study, the Canadian Obstructive Lung disease "COLD" study. The CanCOLD will be the first study to assess prevalence of disease across Canada and its consequence in men and women, and to evaluate a conceptual model of disease severity based on patient's health perception (health-related quality of life). Ultimately, this project will extend to a longitudinal follow up (3 years or beyond) and will allow to have a better understanding of the lifestyle risk factors, not only smoking but also diet, physical activity, and co morbid conditions. This will be a great asset to shift from management of a single risk factor (tobacco control) to total COPD risk management. The results of the study will greatly help to assist decision makers in developing policies to improve the diagnosis, the management of COPD and to optimize health care services use.

Unknown status1 enrollment criteria

Exacerbations and Health Related Quality of Life in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbation is a major cause of physician visits and hospital admissions associated with acute respiratory failure, causing increased morbidity and premature mortality and thus it can significantly affect Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). Previous studies suggested that patients who have experienced frequent exacerbation present worse HRQoL compared to patients with infrequent exacerbations. However, there are still questions regarding the relationship between HRQoL and exacerbations. In the present study the investigators will study a cohort of COPD patients over 6 years, they will document exacerbations, they will assess lung emphysema by computed tomography of the chest and they will evaluate health related quality of life in COPD patients. The investigators hypothesize that the extend of emphysema in COPD patients is positively correlated with worsen Health related quality of life (HRQoL).

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

COPD in the Time of COVID-19

COPD ExacerbationCOPD

This cross-sectional observational study will collect information about changes in exacerbation frequency and behaviour amongst a clinical cohort of severe or complex COPD clinic patients. This will be done through a combination of telephone survey and access to electronic heath records.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Advancing the Patient Experience in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (APEX COPD)

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (13645005)

APEX COPD is registry to provide a mechanism to standardize, store and utilize data to enable greater power to answer key research questions, and to improve patient outcomes in COPD primary care.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

Validation of an Intermittent Shuttle Walking Protocol in Patients With COPD

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

In the UK, field-based walking is prescribed in the pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) setting as a convenient, less resource-intensive, and highly responsive exercise modality in COPD patients. However, endurance time during the implementation of field-based walking protocols, such as the endurance shuttle walking (ESW) protocol, is limited to only a few minutes secondary to intense exertional symptoms. It therefore seems sensible to develop an intermittent field-based walking protocol that would prolong endurance time and walking distance compared to the commonly implemented in the PR setting continuous ESW protocol. The aim of this study is three-fold: 1) to identify whether an intermittent shuttle walking protocol significantly prolongs walking distance compared to the widely implemented continuous ESW protocol in the PR setting in patients with advanced COPD; 2) to investigate the test re-test reliability of the distance walked during the intermittent shuttle walking protocol; and 3) to explore patients' and health care professionals' experiences of implementing the intermittent walking protocol and the perceived factors affecting the implementation of these protocols in the PR setting. The study hypothesis is that the intermittent shuttle walking protocol would be associated with lower dynamic hyperinflation and breathlessness, thereby facilitating an increase in walking distance compared to the continuous ESW protocol. The same group of patients with advanced COPD will initially perform an incremental shuttle walk test (ISWT) (visit 1) to establish peak walking speed and subsequently patients will perform the continuous ESW protocol (visit 2) at a walking speed corresponding to 85% of peak walking speed to the limit of tolerance. On two additional visits (visits 3 and 4) patients will perform two intermittent shuttle walking protocols to the limit of tolerance by alternating 1-min walking bouts at a walking speed corresponding to 85% peak walking speed (equivalent to the ESW protocol) with 1-min rest periods in between walking bouts to establish the reproducibility of this protocol. Focus group interviews with patients and healthcare professionals will be conducted to explore perceptions of undertaking and implementing, respectively the intermittent walking protocol.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

Prospective Cohort Study of Molecular Mechanism of Lower Respiratory Tract Microbes in Patients...

Acute Exacerbation of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseMicrobiome

How to reduce the rapid decline of lung function in patients with AECOPD is a clinically urgent problem to be solved. Studies have suggested that there is a bacterial flora imbalance in the lower respiratory tract of COPD patients. To explore the relationship between microbiology and host immunity is a hot topic in the field of COPD. The investigators use NGS (next generation sequencing) technology to fully explore the specific molecular mechanism of the lower respiratory tract microbiome in patients with COPD by regulating the transcriptional activities of NF-κB and PPARγ in alveolar macrophages, resulting in pulmonary parenchymal remodeling and decreased lung function. In this study, a prospective cohort study will be used to evaluate the effect of the lower respiratory tract microbiome on lung tissue (alveolar space and pulmonary vascular) remodeling and pulmonary function decline in patients with AECOPD.

Unknown status28 enrollment criteria
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