Comparison of Efficacy Different Treatment Regimens in Pulmonary Hypertension Secondary to Lung...
Pulmonary Hypertension Secondary to Lung Disease and/or HypoxiaThis is an open label, randomized, interventional study indented to find the efficacy of different treatment regimens in treatment of pulmonary hypertension secondary to lung disease and/or hypoxia.This is to find out when to start combination therapy (sildenafil plus bosentan) in treatment of pulmonary hypertension secondary to lung disease and/or hypoxia.
Assessment of the Effectiveness of Vibroacoustic Therapy for Respiratory Failure Caused by COVID...
Respiratory Distress SyndromeHypoxemiaVibroacoustic pulmonary therapy in patients with COVID19 is believed to have a positive effect on oxygen status and a decrease in the duration of respiratory failure
The Effect of High-flow Nasal Oxygenation to the Saturation During Analgo-sedation in Different...
Noninvasive VentilationRespiratory Insufficiency4 moreAnalgo-sedation is standard procedure in anesthesiology practice and is often given for colonoscopy in the setting of daily hospital. Ideally, patients should be sedated with preserved spontaneous breathing and adequate blood O2 saturation. To maintain adequate oxygenation, low-flow O2 (2-6 L/min) is usually delivered through standard nasal catheter which can provide inspired fraction (FiO2) of 40% (low-flow nasal oxygenation - LFNO). Coldness and dryness of LFNO applied may be uncomfortable to patient. Standardly applied intravenous anesthetics can lead to transient ceasing of breathing and O2 desaturation despite LFNO. Respiratory instability can also potentiate circulatory instability - undesirable changes in heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP). Unlike LFNO, high-flow heated and humidified nasal oxygenation (HFNO) is characterized by the oxygen-air mixture flow of 20 to 70 L/min up to 100% FiO2. Warm and humidified O2, delivered via soft, specially designed nasal cannula, is pleasant to patient. HFNO develops continuous positive pressure of 3 to 7 cmH2O in upper airway which enables noninvasive support to patient's spontaneous breathing thus prolonging time of adequate O2 saturation. Aim of this study is to compare effect of HFNO and LFNO on oxygenation maintenance before, during and after standardized procedure of intravenous analgo-sedation in normal weight patients of ASA risk I, II and III. Investigators hypothesize that application of HFNO compared to LFNO, in patients with preserved spontaneous breathing during procedural analgo-sedation, will contribute to maintaining of adequate oxygenation, consequentially adding to greater circulatory and respiratory patients' stability. Investigators expect that patients who receive HFNO will better maintain adequate oxygenation regarding improved spontaneous breathing. Also patients will have shorter intervals of blood oxygen desaturation, less pronounced rise in blood CO2 level and lesser fall of blood O2 level, less change in HR and BP. Investigators will have to exactly estimate partial and global respiratory insufficiency (blood CO2 and O2 levels) associated with LFNO and HFNO, which will be done by blood-gas analysis of 3 arterial blood samples collected before, during and after analgo - sedation via previously, in local anesthesia, placed arterial cannula. Possible complications will be explained in written uniformed consent and by anesthesiologist.
The Role of Hypoxia as a Selective Pressure for TP53 Mutations
Endometrial CancerThe study aims to develop scans that tell the investigators about the oxygen content of tumours using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and seeing whether regions of low oxygen content are related to mutations in cancer genes such as TP53. MRI is a method of obtaining pictures of inside of the body that shows the appearance and structure of soft tissues. To get the information about the oxygen content of tumours, MRI is carried out while breathing 100% oxygen. The variation of oxygen supply to different regions of the tumour will help the investigators to predict tumour behavior and tumour response to treatment.
The Correlation Between Sleep Quality and Atrial Fibrillation Undergoing High-flow Nasal Cannula...
HypoxemiaThe investigators hypothesized that heated humidified high-flow nasal cannula oxygen(HFNC) along with high quality of sleep, in comparison with noninvasive positive pressure ventilation (NIV), could reduce the release of inflammatory marker C-reactive protein(CRP), which as independent predictor of atrial fibrillation(AF), further lower the incidence of new-onset AF following coronary artery bypass grafting(CABG).
A Study of Hypoxia Imaging in Advanced Pancreatic Cancer Patients Being Treated With Gemcitabine...
Pancreatic AdenocarcinomaAdvanced Disease1 moreResearchers are looking for better ways of diagnosing and treating pancreatic cancer. It is believed that looking for low levels of oxygen (hypoxia) in tumours may give a better understanding of how certain tumours grow or respond to certain treatments. This study will look at hypoxia in pancreatic tumours while participants are receiving treatment with the combination of gemcitabine and TH-302/placebo in the EMR 200592-001 clinical research study. This study will use positron emission tomography (PET) scans to look at hypoxia in tumours. PET is an imaging test that can be used to measure hypoxia in tumours. For this study, a radioactive tracer called Fluoroazomycin Arabinoside (FAZA) will be used to "label" areas of hypoxia in tumours. Determining the levels of hypoxia in tumour tissue using FAZA-PET scans and comparing these levels with the patient's response to treatment with gemcitabine and TH-302/placebo for pancreatic cancer may help the researchers to determine the relationship between hypoxia and response to this treatment. The main purpose of this study is to see how useful looking at hypoxia in tumours are when they are done at different centres.
Vasopressors for Cerebral Oxygenation
HypoxiaHypotensionLiberal fluid administration is one of risk factors of developing acute lung injury (ALI) in thoracic surgery. Therefore, the investigators try to restrain fluid administration, and in the case of intraoperative hypotension, the investigators often administer vasoactive agents or inotropes. One lung ventilation (OLV) which is routinely employed for thoracic surgery decrease arterial oxygenation and oxygen delivery to brain can be also decreased. In this study, the investigators compared dopamine and phenylephrine in respect to maintaining cerebral oxygen saturation in major thoracic surgery. The investigators hypothesis is that dopamine is better than phenylephrine to maintain cerebral oxygen saturation in thoracic surgery.
Safety Study of Nebulized Sodium Nitroprusside in Adult Acute Lung Injury
Acute Lung InjuryAcute Respiratory Distress Syndrome3 moreAcute lung injury (ALI) is caused by a wide variety of conditions, but always characterized by hypoxia and non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema. Current treatment of ALI is supportive and treatment of the underlying cause. New therapies to treat severe ALI have not been shown to improve survival, and are limited by financial and logistical resources. The investigators propose to investigate the role of inhaled sodium nitroprusside (iSNP) in ALI. Sodium nitroprusside (SNP) is a vasodilator. When inhaled, SNP may travel to areas of the lung participating in gas exchange, and cause the blood vessels surrounding these areas to enlarge. This may result in an increase of blood vessels to these areas of the lung, and improve oxygenation. Currently, iSNP has not been studied in the adult population. Therefore, this study is intended to find the safety profile of varying doses of iSNP.
Hypoxic Training in Obese Patients
ObesityBy analyzing energetic and biomechanical basis of walking, and the subsequent changes induced by hypoxic vs normoxic training in obese individuals, it may optimize the use of walking in hypoxia to gain perspective for exercise prescription to set up training programs that aim to induce negative energy balance and to deal with weight management. However to the investigators knowledge, the analysis of changes in mechanics, energetics and efficiency of walking after continuous hypoxic training (CHT) has not been performed yet. The aims of the present study were: Comparing the changes in body composition between continuous hypoxic training (CHT) and similar training in normoxia; e.g. continuous normoxic training (CNT) in obese subjects. Comparing the metabolic and energetics adaptations to CHT vs CNT. Finally, comparing the associated body-loss induced gait modification since walking intensity at spontaneous walking speed (Ss) is lower in CHT than in CNT.
Influence of Chronic Hypoxia on Oxidative Phenotype in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary...
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseIn addition to chronic airflow obstruction, patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) suffer from skeletal muscle dysfunction which is a prominent and disabling feature and also an independent determinant of survival. Muscular impairment involves loss of muscle oxidative phenotype (OXPHEN: a slow-to-fast shift in fibre types and reduced oxidative capacity). Since hypoxia obviously is a key feature of COPD, the aim of this study is to elucidate the role of hypoxia in loss of muscle OXPHEN. Thus, OXPHEN and expression levels of its key regulators will be determined in the baseline biopsies for association with the degree of hypoxemia. In addition, expression levels of the key OXPHEN regulators will be measured in pre/post exercise biopsies.