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Active clinical trials for "Hypoxia"

Results 501-510 of 998

Feasibility Trial to Maintain Normal Cerebral Oxygen Saturation in High-Risk Cardiac Surgery

Cerebral Hypoxia

Using the brain and the heart as index organs, perioperative interventions to optimize cerebral oxygen saturation and cardiac contractility in high-risk patients undergoing cardiac surgery should have a beneficial systemic effect for enhancing global tissue perfusion and improve outcomes.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Optimising Diagnosis and Antibiotic Prescribing for Acutely Ill Children in Primary Care

SepsisBacteraemia8 more

Acute illness is the most common presentation of children attending ambulatory care settings. Serious infections (e.g. meningitis, sepsis, pyelonephritis, pneumonia) are rare, but their impact is quite large (increased morbidity, mortality, induced fear in parents and defensive behaviour in clinicians). Early recognition and adequate referral of serious infections are essential to avoid complications (e.g. hearing loss after bacterial meningitis) and their accompanied mortality. Secondly, we aim to reduce the number of investigations, referrals, treatments and hospitalisations in children who are diagnosed with a non-serious infection. Apart from the cost-effectiveness, this could lead to less traumatic experiences for the child and less fear induction for the concerned parent. Finally, we aim to support the clinicians to rationalise their antibiotic prescribing behaviour, resulting in a reduction of antibiotic resistance in the long run.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Fluorine F18-EF5 and Fludeoxyglucose F18 Positron Emission Tomography in Assessing Hypoxia and Glycolysis...

Non-small Cell Lung Cancer

RATIONALE: Diagnostic procedures, such as positron emission tomography, using the drug fluorine F18-EF5 to find oxygen and fludeoxyglucose F18 to find sugar in tumor cells may help in planning treatment for patients with non-small cell lung cancer.

Completed13 enrollment criteria

Does Capnography Prevent Hypoxemia During Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangiopancreatography and Endoscopic...

Hypoxemia

Subjects undergoing elective ERCP and EUS will receive standard monitoring and sedation. In addition, capnography which measures carbon dioxide levels and can graphically assess respiratory activity will be used. Subjects will be randomized to either a capnography blinded or titration arm. In the capnography titration arm, the endoscopy team would be made aware of capnographic abnormalities as they arise throughout the procedure. In the capnography blinded arm, this information will not be available to the endoscopy team and represents standard of care. It is our hypothesis that using capnography can prevent low oxygen levels known as hypoxemia, during these procedures.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Prevention of Acute Mountain Sickness by Intermittent Hypoxia

Acute Mountain Sickness

Acclimatization by mountaineering prior to high altitude sojourns have shown to be effective in prevention of acute mountain sickness (AMS). The aim of this study is to investigate whether intermittent exposure to normobaric hypoxia during sleep is also effective to prevent AMS.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

SpO2 Accuracy Comparison of Smart Sock V. 2 SpO2 to Arterial Blood CO-Oximetry

Hypoxia

Pulse oximetry monitoring is considered a standard physiological measurement and is used by clinicians in everyday situations to estimate arterial oxygen saturation. There are two devices used in this investigational study: BabySat v.1.0 and Owlet Baby Care, Inc. Smart SockTM 2 (currently available over-the-counter), with specific emphasis on its pulse oximetry accuracy. The BabySat and Smart SockTM 2 are non-invasive home care devices for use with infants. The purpose of this study was to validate the SpO2 accuracy of BabySat v1.0 and Owlet Smart SockTM 2, OSS v1.1 sensors pulse oximetry, during non-motion conditions over the range of 70-100% SaO2 as compared to arterial blood samples assessed by CO-Oximetry.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Impact of Pulse Oximetry on Hospital Referral Acceptance in Children Under 5 With Severe Pneumonia...

Severe PneumoniaHypoxemia

The study assesses and compares the effect of 'pulse oximetry' (PO) used by Lady Health Workers (LHWs) at household level on increasing hospital referral acceptance rates in intervention clusters (district Jamshoro) for 0-59 months old children with severe pneumonia with the effect of LHWs using clinical signs alone in non-intervention clusters of the same district.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

High-flow Nasal Cannula Oxygenation Decrease Hypoxia in Gastroscopy Sedated by Propofol

HypoxiaGastric Cancer2 more

Hypoxia is the most common adverse events during sedated gastroscopy. In present study, high-flow nasal cannula oxygenation will be utilized in order to reduce the hypoxia. At the same time the feasibility and safety will be evaluated.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Direct and Cross Effects of Adaptation to Systemic Hyperthermia: Impact on Quality of Life, Neurohormonal...

HypoxiaAltitude3 more

Life expectancy and quality of human life are important indicator of the sustainable development of the society. At the same time, the physical, functional, emotional and psychological components of the of the quality of life evaluation are subjected to be evaluated objectively and corrected using modern medical and socio-psychological methods. According to a fair number of experts, the arsenal of means for functional rehabilitation and health promotion is limited, and its expansion is only possible on the basis of the principles of adaptation medicine and their translation from experimental research into specific preventive and health-promoting technologies. The study is aimed at the development in molecular-endocrine, neuro-visceral and psychophysiological complex mechanisms of human long-term adaptation to systemic modern heating device-based hyperthermia for the development of medical technology focused on optimization in physical functioning, neuro-autonomic regulation, psycho-emotional status and stress- resistance as objective characteristics of humans' quality of life in working age. The novelty of the project is the disclosure of key mechanisms of adaptational direct and cross-effects to the prolonged systemic individually dosed hyperthermia underlying the optimization of stress-resistance, psycho-physiological status and exercise tolerance of practically healthy persons and leading to an increase in the subjectively perceived quality of life. The discovery of the mechanisms of hyperthermically induced neuroplasticity (in terms of the dynamics of oxidative stress, heat shock proteins and the brain derived neurotrophic factor) will also have a scientific significance, which in the long term prospectives may play a role in the development of technics for the prevention and rehabilitation of age-associated neuro-degenerative processes and diseases.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Digoxin for Congenital Erythrocytosis Due to Up-Regulated Hypoxia Sensing

Polycythemia; FamilialErythrocytosis; Familial4 more

The investigators will study digoxin to inhibit the hypoxic response in congenital erythrocytosis due to germ line mutations that result in up-regulated hypoxia sensing. These forms of congenital erythrocytosis, characterized by augmented levels of hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1 and HIF-2, are due to mutations of VHL (von Hippel Lindau), EGLN1 (encoding prolyl hydroxylase 2 [PHD2]) and EPAS1 (endothelial PAS domain-containing protein 1) (encoding HIF-2α). In addition to a high hematocrit, patients have thrombotic complications and early mortality that are not improved by phlebotomy therapy. There is no effective therapy. Digoxin, long used to treat congestive heart failure, is a potent inhibitor of the master hypoxia-inducible transcription factor, HIF-1. The study hypothesis is that pharmacologic doses and levels of digoxin will decrease hemoglobin and hematocrit, decrease need for phlebotomy, decrease the propensity to thrombosis and decrease pulmonary pressure in patients with erythrocytosis due to up-regulated hypoxic responses. The clinical trial consists of 24 weeks of digoxin therapy in patients with hypoxic response-related erythrocytosis. The complete blood count, safety, symptoms of headache and lack of energy, echocardiogram, physical performance, and plasma products and blood cell expression of HIF-1-regulated genes are the outcome variables.

Withdrawn13 enrollment criteria
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