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Active clinical trials for "Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive"

Results 2191-2200 of 3300

TELE-monitoring in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

COPD

COPD is the fourth cause of death worldwide and it is expected to be the third in 2020. Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) has a positive impact in reducing mortality related to chronic respiratory failure in stable patients with COPD. Moreover, the addition of home NIV to home oxygen therapy reduces hospital admissions and improves patients outcomes. Patients monitoring is crucial. It is increasingly recognized the potential of telemedicine in reducing morbidity and mortality, as well as healthcare utilisation and its associated costs. In particular, home telemonitoring (TM)- a technology measuring patients'clinical parameters and symptoms at home and allowing communication between healthcare professionals and patients over distance- has gained much attention. However, despite a growing body of evidence for TM in the management of COPD and other chronic diseases, the benefit of telemonitoring for Home mechanical ventilation concerning clinical and economic outcomes remains to be clearly demonstrated. The study aims to assess the impact that telemonitoring would have NIV efficacy, patient quality of life and satisfaction, through a prospective randomized study.The primary endpoint is the time for appropriate adaptation and therapy efficacy, defined as average SatO2 to 90% in 24h oximetry.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

Bronchodilator Test in Mechanical Ventilated Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Patients

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Investigators developed a test to assess the bronchodilator effects in mechanically ventilated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients by comparing the change of airway resistance. No matter whether patients respond to bronchodilator or not, they are randomized assigned to bronchodilator 3-4 times per day group and no bronchodilator group. Then investigators could objectively decide whether individual patients need or benefit from bronchodilator administration.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

An Efficacy Study of BCS Clearing the Oral Colonized Bacterium in Hospitalized Patients With COPD...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The purpose of study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Benzalkonium Chloride Solution clearing the oral colonized bacterium in hospitalized patients with COPD.

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

An Innovative Disease-net Management Model for Non-communicable Diseases (SIDERA^B)

Parkinson Disease (PD)Chronic Heart Failure (CHF)1 more

The SIDERA^B telerehabilitation system is enabled by a multi-domain, multi-device platform providing at home multi-component rehabilitation, targeting cardiovascular (Chronic Heart Failure, CHF), pulmonary (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, COPD) and neurodegenerative (Parkinson Disease, PD) chronic diseases. The rehabilitation program embeds engagement activities for patient and caregiver, to empower appropriation of the SIDERA^B care routines and fuel their well-being resources. The multidisciplinary layering of SIDERA^B is reflected in the validation protocol including a) clinical and well-being evaluation through a cross-over study confronting usual care with the SIDERA^B activities; b) technological evaluation: Health Technology Assessment for organizational, legal and equity impacts; c) economic evaluation: process mapping and budget impact analysis to define a sustainable reimbursement process for the innovative telerehabilitation pathway.

Unknown status20 enrollment criteria

Breath-actuated Nebulizers in Acute COPD Exacerbations

COPD Exacerbation

The goal of this study is to evaluate the utilization and outcomes of AeroEclipse® II Breath Actuated Nebulizer (BAN, Monaghan Medical Corporation, Plattsburgh, NY) vs. standard continuous flow nebulizers (SN). We hypothesize that the use of AeroEclipse® II BAN will reduce the number of nebulizer treatments needed (primary outcome).

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Respiratory Training on Exercise Tolerance in COPD

Pulmonary DiseaseChronic Obstructive

Exercise intolerance is one of the key disabling factors in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Although multifactorial, exercise intolerance involves physiological interactions between respiratory and locomotor muscles that may contribute to further reducing exercise tolerance in COPD. The respiratory muscle work during exercise is closely related to breathing and could induce respiratory muscle fatigue in patients with COPD. Respiratory muscle training is an intervention strategy that is sometimes proposed for some patients with COPD, especially whose with inspiratory muscle weakness. It was reported that inspiratory muscle training improves inspiratory muscle endurance and strength, dyspnea and exercise tolerance. There are two types of inspiratory muscle training, inspiratory muscle training against a resistive loading and normocapnic hyperpnoea. The advantage of normocapnic hyperpnoea compared to resistive training is the possibility to simulate the exercise ventilation level while maintaining stable the partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide and end-tidal pressure of carbon dioxide and to solicit the inspiratory and expiratory muscles together, which could increase respiratory muscle tolerance and avoid their fatigue during whole-body exercise. Therefore, the aim of this project is to study the effect of normocapnic hyperpnoea training on exercise tolerance in patients with COPD. We hypothesize that greater improvement in cycling exercise tolerance will be observed following 6-weeks normocapnic hyperpnoea training compared to a sham intervention in patients with COPD.

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

Feasibility & Effect of a Tele-rehabilitation Program for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease...

COPD

Introduction In order to guarantee chronic patients and elderly a high quality service from health care organizations in the coming decades, new technologies have been implemented to treat patients from a distance. There is still a need for more studies on the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of tele-rehabilitation (TR) and its long-term effects needs also to be determined. To guarantee individuals with chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPD) a high quality service from health care organizations in the coming decades and economically save the national health systems for an expensive bill for the treatment of COPD, new actions plans has to be taken into use. Hereby, more patients can be treated with less human resources while still sustaining or even improving today's services. The importance of such welfare action plans has to maintain a high quality of service that individuals with COPD are willing to accept. Here, TR seems to be a good welfare action plans. Despite proof of improved cost-effectiveness, no studies support the benefits of TR in COPD patient with respect to adherence, security, treatment efficacy and improved quality of life. Aim To assess and compare the feasibility and effect of a tele-rehabilitation program with a new and innovative TR platform (NITRP) compared to standard treatment with respect to exercise capacity, quality of life and activities of daily living in patients with COPD. Method and material The study is a prospective randomized controlled trial comparing the effects of tele-rehabilitation and conventional rehabilitation in patients with severe COPD. 54 patients fulfilling the inclusion criteria will be randomized in two groups to either a 8 week tele-rehabilitation program or a conventional COPD rehabilitation program at the hospital. Participants will be tested at baseline, 8 weeks, 3 and 6 months after cessation of the training programs. In the intervention group, a real- and a virtual physiotherapist agent will facilitate the rehabilitation. Ethical considerations This study will not pose any risk to the patient as compared to current practice. Participation is voluntary and the patient may at any time withdraw from the study without consequences for future care or treatment. The questionnaires and the test methods used are clinically recognized instruments. Signed informed consent will be obtained from the all participants after verbal and written information and before the study starts. The study will not be initiated before approval from the Ethics Committee and the Data Protection Agency has been obtained. The study will follow the general research ethical rules as expressed in the Helsinki Declaration II.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

Transcutaneous Electrical Diaphragmatic Stimulation and Inspiratory Muscle Training in Patients...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is characterized by chronic airflow limitation, a qualification of impairment of respiratory muscle function, including hyperinflation and muscle weakness. Thus, pulmonary rehabilitation is indicated for patients and is recommended for even the most severe cases. However some patients do not conclude conventional rehabilitation protocols, due to exercise intolerance, are then an electrical estimation and muscle training respiratory adjuvant treatments for patients. and little has been explored about the effects and methodologies of using transcutaneous electrical diaphragmatic stimulation (TEDS) in healthy subjects. The objective of this study on stage I is to evaluate the acute effect of transcutaneous electrical diaphragmatic stimulation on respiratory muscle strength, cardiac variability, thickness, resistance, mobility and diaphragmatic activation comparing different frequencies of electrical stimulation in healthy individuals. The objective of this study on stage II is to evaluate the effects of transcutaneous electrical diaphragmatic stimulation, compared to inspiratory muscle training on respiratory muscle strength, security of the technics, thickness and diaphragmatic function in healthy individuals.The objective of this study on stage III is to evaluate the effects of transcutaneous electrical diaphragmatic stimulation, compared to IMT on respiratory muscle strength, lung function, thickness and diaphragmatic function in patients with exacerbated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Hospital de Clinicas of Porto Alegre (CAEE: 80271517.2.0000.5327).

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Acute Effects of Incremental Inspiratory Loads on Respiratory Mechanics and NRD in Patient With...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Inspiratory muscle training has been an important part of pulmonary rehabilitation program directed at patients with COPD. It can increase respiratory muscle strength, relieve dyspnea ,improve the quality of life in COPD patients. However, there is no uniform standard for the intensity of inspiratory muscle training. By comparing a series of indexes, such as maximal inspiratory pressure, maximal expiratory pressure, degree of dyspnea and exercise capacity before and after the training under different intensity, a large number of literatures have explored the appropriate intensity of inspiratory muscle training. But to date, there are few studies about the effects of different intensity of inspiratory muscle training on respiratory physiological mechanism. It has been shown that inspiratory muscle training may be more beneficial to improve the pulmonary rehabilitation effect of COPD patients with inspiratory muscle weakness. So it is not clear whether there is a difference in respiratory physiology between patients with normal inspiratory muscle strength and those with lower inspiratory muscle strength. Respiratory central drive, as an important physiological index, which can be reflected by minute ventilation volume, mouth pressure, mean inspiratory flow and diaphragm electromyography,is closely related to the symptoms and the severity of the disease.Therefore,the purpose of this study was to investigate the changes of respiratory mechanics and central drive in COPD patients at different inspiratory loads, and at the same loads between patients with and without respiratory muscle weakness.That can provide more evidential evidence for setting up the intensity of inspiratory muscle training.

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Effects of Traditional Chinese Medicine on AECOPD Patients

Pulmonary DiseaseChronic Obstructive3 more

This is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial to compare the efficacy of two therapies for patients with AECOPD. 378 subjects will be randomly assigned to one therapies (conventional drug, and the combination of conventional drug and TCM) for 14 days treatment. After the treatment period, subjects in two arms will be followed up for 4 weeks. The primary outcomes will include COPD Assessment Test (CAT), and secondary outcomes include treatment failure rate, treatment success rate, hospitalization time, hospital admission rate, endotracheal intubation rate, mortality and quality of life (COPD-PRO, SF-36).

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria
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