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Active clinical trials for "Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive"

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Feasibility and Effectiveness of Telehealth in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Recent studies have demonstrated the promising potential that telehealth has in management of chronic disease. For COPD patients, implementation of telehealth reduced readmissions, emergency room visits, and exacerbations and was cost-effective. Telehealth as a method of delivering healthcare to remote, resource-deprived areas is not lacking in evidence of benefit; however, the situation about its more widespread use for monitoring purposes is much less clear. To date, most of the studies dealing with telehealth in COPD were conducted in countries covering vast territories. Therefore, it needs to be investigated whether telehealth conveys similar advantages for COPD patients in a small island country.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of a Lightweight Nasal Interface and Ventilator in Patients With Respiratory Disease...

Chronic Obstructive Lung DiseaseInterstitial Lung Disease

A preliminary study to evaluate a new nasal interface and portable ventilator system in comparison to standard oxygen therapy in patients with severe chronic lung disease.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Development of an Optimal Antibiotic Regime for Long-term Therapy in Stable Chronic Obstructive...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD).

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is the cause of considerable deaths, and exacerbations (flare up of symptoms) are a major cause of hospital admission in the UK. Bacterial infections play an important role in the development of COPD, however, there is little information available about the use of long term antibiotics in the treatment of this disease. Therefore the purpose of this study is to identify the best antibiotic regime for treating patients with COPD who have persistent bacterial infection in their lung. We will test a variety of approaches including both older and newer regimes prescribed either on a daily basis at a lower dose or in "pulsed" courses (for example, every other day or five days every month). The three antibiotics tested in this study are: moxifloxacin, azithromycin and doxycycline. This is a 13 weeks study conducted at the Royal Free Hospital, London. It is expected that approximately 200 patients will be selected for this study. The information we get from this study may help us to treat future patients with COPD better.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Exacerbation Prevention GOLD IV COPD With Non Invasive Mechanical Ventilation

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of high-intensity non invasive mechanical ventilation (during one year to reduce the severity and frequency of acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD) in patients with frequent AECOPD (frequent exacerbations defined more two or more AECOPD) and in GOLD IV stage (very severe COPD). The design is a randomised, double blind and controled with placebo (sham maneuver) clinical trial.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Programs of Coordinated Care and Disease Management

Congestive Heart FailureDiabetes7 more

This is a Congressionally mandated study. In the original study, 16 demonstration programs provided care coordination services to beneficiaries with chronic illness in Medicare's fee-for-service program. A five-year CMS-funded study tested whether the programs can improve patients' use of medical services, improve patients' outcomes and satisfaction with care, and reduce Medicare costs. The study also assessed physicians' satisfaction with the programs. In 2008 Congress extended the project for two of the original programs--Mercy Medical Center - North Iowa and Health Quality Partners in Pennsylvania--and they will enroll Medicare beneficiaries and provide care coordination services into the spring of 2010.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

Randomized Controlled Trial of Home Telemonitoring for Elderly People

Diabetes MellitusChronic Heart Failure1 more

The DREAMING clinical trial is part of the DREAMING project, which has the objective to demonstrate that the DREAMING platform consisting of integrated health monitoring, alarm handling and videoconferencing services produces clinical benefits to its users and economic benefits to the health authorities. The study evaluates the long-term (30 months) effect of continuous use of the DREAMING subsystems and is testing the hypothesis that such use is superior to usual care alone in reducing the deterioration of health related quality of life that is associated to age and chronic disease. It also tests the hypothesis that the DREAMING environment is superior to usual care in delaying the transfer to nursing or elderly homes and in reducing the incidence and duration of hospitalisation episodes. The trial will also evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the DREAMING platform. Outcomes are assessed in six different health care systems (Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Italy, Spain and Sweden) and will represent a basis for the adoption of DREAMING services by the respective health authorities.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program and PROactive Tool

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Pulmonary rehabilitation is an essential non pharmacological treatment option which reduces dyspnea sensations, increase exercise tolerance, improves health related quality of life and reduces the burden on health care resources (1). Pulmonary rehabilitation is likely an ideal intervention to validate the PROactive tool as responses to pulmonary rehabilitation are clinically significant in terms of exercise tolerance and particularly activity related symptoms. Nevertheless, the response to pulmonary rehabilitation is variable and about one out of three patients does not present a clinically important response. Pulmonary rehabilitation may therefore be an intervention that allows studying the conceptual model around the PROactive tools, anchoring the new PROs (Patient Report Outcome) to outcomes that are well known to change with rehabilitation: exercise induced symptoms, functional exercise tolerance and health related quality of life. Study objectives Main objectives A primary aim is to test reliability of the paper-pencil versus the electronic scoring version of the PROactive tool in terms of assessing the effect of pulmonary rehabilitation on the components of the PROactive tool and on the mode of administration. The secondary aim of the proposed project is to investigate the effects of a multidisciplinary outpatient hospital-based, pulmonary rehabilitation program on: i) daily physical activity (number of daily steps, vector magnitude unit and movement intensity and ii) the components of the Proactive tool. Additional study objectives A third aim of this project is to investigate whether the magnitude of change in daily physical activity and the components of the PROactive tool in general is associated with the magnitude of changes in frequently used rehabilitation related end-points including, functional capacity, exercise capacity and health-related quality of life following the completion of a comprehensive pulmonary rehabilitation program. A forth aim of this project is to investigate whether the magnitude of change in daily physical activity and the components of the PROactive tool in general is associated with the magnitude of changes in physiological indices including cardiovascular and respiratory adaptations following completion of a comprehensive pulmonary rehabilitation program.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

Use of an Air Warming Mask for Exercise in Patients With COPD V1.0

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The World Health Organisation defines chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) as 'not one single disease but an umbrella term used to describe chronic lung diseases that cause limitations in lung airflow' covering emphysema and chronic bronchitis; and estimates (2004) that worldwide there are currently 64 million sufferers with 3 to 4 million in the UK. COPD results from damaged airways in the lungs, causing them to become narrower and making it harder for air to get in and out of the lungs. It is diagnosed by measuring the amount of air that can be expelled in the first second of breathing out (FEV1) in litres per second. COPD is a progressive disease and the condition can have a serious impact on the quality of life of sufferers. Going out in very cold weather can cause an immediate drop in FEV1, and increased breathlessness. This is a randomised crossover controlled trial of participants with COPD. It compares the effectiveness of an air-warming face mask which covers the mouth compared with no face covering, in increasing participants exercise capacity and quality of life in cold weather. The mask warms air at the mouth by drawing on air warmed beneath the participants clothing, through a 20cm long hollow plastic tube and a one-way inspiratory valve into the mask. Air is expired through the nose. 24 participants with moderate or severe COPD, will undertake 3 exercise tests on 3 separate days. Two tests will be in an environmentally controlled chamber performed at 5°C with participants wearing either the mask or no face covering. The third test will be performed at ambient temperature outside the chamber. The order will be determined by random allocation. Participants will undergo the Treadmill 6 Minute Walk Test; various measurements will be taken, all of which will be non-invasive.

Unknown status15 enrollment criteria

Home Telehealth Follow-up After Hospital Discharge for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)...

Pulmonary DiseaseChronic Obstructive

The purpose of this study is to assess the effects of a complex telemedicine intervention as a part of an integrated care program for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) discharged from the hospital after disease exacerbation. Will be evaluated whether the intervention produces benefits in terms of mortality, reduction in hospital readmissions and health-related quality of life. In addition, the trial evaluates the economical and organizational impact of the new service and examines its acceptability by patients and health professionals.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Respiratory Rehabilitation for Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

The aim of this clinical trial is to establish the non-inferiority of home-based respiratory rehabilitation compared to respiratory rehabilitation in center in terms of exercise tolerance as evaluated by the 6 minutes Stepper test.. This trial will also 1°) evaluate the Medico-economic aspects of the home-based Respiratory rehabilitation versus respiratory Rehabilitation in center; 2°) analyse the patient preferences between home-based respiratory rehabilitation and respiratory rehabilitation in center and 3°) Compare home-based respiratory rehabilitation vs respiratory rehabilitation in center in terms of dyspnea, quality of life, anxiety and depression.

Unknown status13 enrollment criteria
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