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Active clinical trials for "Respiratory Insufficiency"

Results 781-790 of 1399

Music Therapy During Pediatric Extubation Readiness Trials

Respiratory Insufficiency

This study seeks to research the effects of music therapy during pediatric extubation readiness trials. Amount of sedation, physiological measures, and parent/staff satisfaction surveys will be measured.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

The Efficacy of Nasal High Flow Oxygen Therapy With Rehabilitation in the Patients With Chronic...

Chronic Respiratory FailureNasal High Flow Therapy2 more

The purpose of this study is to compare the exercise endurance between oxygen therapy with rehabilitation and nasal high flow therapy with rehabilitation for the patients with chronic respiratory failure receiving long-term oxygen therapy.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Eye-Control Trial: Wearable Eye-Tracking Device as Means of Communication

Acute Respiratory Failure Requiring Mechanical Ventilation

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of use of a wearable communication device for critically ill patients who are admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) and mechanically ventilated. The study will assess the safety, tolerability, and ease of use of the EyeControl device, and examine its potential monitoring capabilities.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Awake Prone Positioning in Moderate to Severe COVID-19

COVID-19SARS-CoV2 Infection4 more

The purpose of this study is comparing vital signs between standard care and prone position groups. Standard care will consist of routine clinical care, including any advice to lie in prone position as routinely recommended by participating sites. For those randomized to prone position, a special intervention team will visit patients' rooms aiming for patients to maintain the prone position for at least 8 hours a day.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Effectiveness of Music Intervention on Anxiety and Physiological Responses in Critical Ill Patient...

Diabetic KetoacidosisHeart Disease12 more

Music intervention is a non-pharmacological and effective intervention that can alleviate anxiety and agitation in patients undergoing weaning. The effectiveness of music intervention in reducing anxiety of patients in Intensive Care Unit (ICU) is still unknown. The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of music intervention on anxiety, agitation, sleep quality and physiological parameters on patients in ICU. This study was conducted from January to June 2019. A total of 196 hospitalized ICU patients were divided into two groups. Subjects in experimental group received 30 minutes music intervention for 3 days on bedside whereas subjects in control group received routine care only. The primary outcome was anxiety. Agitation Sedation Scale, sleep quality and physical parameters were selected to collect as secondary outcomes.There was no significant difference between the groups at baseline. The results of this study support that music can reduce anxiety and agitation levels in ICU's patient. Nurses can incorporate this intervention into the daily care in order to reduce the discomfort of patients.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Evaluating Safety and Efficacy of Umbulizer in Patients Requiring Intermittent Positive Pressure...

Respiratory FailureRespiratory Insufficiency1 more

Randomized, control crossover study comparing Umbulizer's efficacy to traditional mechanical ventilators

Completed5 enrollment criteria

The Emergency Department Sedation Pilot Trial

Mechanical VentilationRespiratory Failure

The ED-SED Pilot is a multicenter, prospective, before-and-after study conducted on 344 mechanically ventilated emergency department patients at three academic medical centers: Washington University in St. Louis School of Medicine (St. Louis, MO), Cooper Hospital of Rowan University (Camden, NJ), and University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine (Iowa City, IA). The overall goal is to assess the feasibility of implementing targeted sedation (in terms of sedation depth) for mechanically ventilated ED patients in order to reduce the incidence of unnecessary deep sedation and improve clinical outcomes.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Effect of Prone Positioning Combined With High Flow Oxygen Therapy on Oxygenation During Acute Respiratory...

Covid19

The main manifestation of COVID-19 is acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (AHRF). In patients with AHRF, the need for invasive mechanical ventilation is associated with high mortality. Prone positioning (PP) is a recommended strategy for patients with moderate to severe acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation. Early PP combined with High Flow Oxygen Therapy may benefit spontaneous breathing patients with AHRF due to COVID-19 as recently reported in Jiangsu. Our hypothesis is that early PP combined with High Flow Oxygen Therapy in patients with AHRF due to COVID-19 improves oxygenation.

Completed15 enrollment criteria

Expert-Guided Early Tracheostomy Pathway

Respiratory FailureTracheostomy Complication

The optimal timing of tracheostomy insertion remains uncertain. We hypothesized that a clinical pathway including expert-informed risk assessment regarding predicted duration of mechanical (MV) would enhance the effectiveness of early percutaneous dilatational tracheostomy (PDT) for patients with anticipated prolonged durations of MV, as reflected by duration of ventilation, complications, and patient-centered outcomes.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

New Setting of Neurally Adjusted Ventilatory Assist During Mask Noninvasive Ventilation

Acute Respiratory FailureMechanical Ventilation Complication

Non invasive ventilation (NIV) is generally delivered by pneumatically triggered and cycled-off Pressure Support (PSP) through a facial mask. Compared to PSP, Neurally Adjusted Ventilatory Assist (NAVA), which is the only ventilatory mode using a non-pneumatic signal, i.e., diaphragm electrical activity (EAdi), to trigger and drive ventilator assistance, improves patient-ventilator interaction. A specific setting to generate neurally controlled Pressure Support (PSN) was recently proposed for delivering NIV by helmet. The investigators here compare PSN with PSP and NAVA during NIV by facial mask, with respect to arterial blood gases (ABGs), patient comfort, and patient-ventilator interaction and synchrony. Three 30-minute trials of NIV were randomly delivered to 14 patients immediately after extubation to prevent post-extubation respiratory failure: 1) PSP, with an inspiratory support ≥8 cmH2O; 2) NAVA, adjusting the NAVA level to achieve a comparable peak EAdi (EAdipeak) as during PSP; 3) PSN, setting the NAVA level at 15 cmH2O/mcV with an upper airway pressure (Paw) limit such to obtain the same overall Paw applied during PSP. We assessed EAdipeak, ABGs, peak inspiratory flow (PIF), time to reach PIF (PIFtime), pressure-time product of the first 300 (PTP300-index) and 500 (PTP500-index) milliseconds after initiation of patient effort, patient comfort, inspiratory trigger delay (DelayTR-insp), and the rate of asynchrony, as assessed by the Asynchrony Index (AI%).

Completed12 enrollment criteria
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