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Active clinical trials for "Infections"

Results 431-440 of 6584

Impact of Pharmaceutical Interviews Regarding the Management of Adverse Effects Related to the Antibiotic...

Bone and Joint Infection

The primary objective is to evaluate the impact of Pharmaceutical Interviews in the patient self-management of non-severe side effects caused by antibiotics prescribed for the treatment of osteoarticular infections when the patient returns home.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

A Controlled Human Vivax Malaria Infection Study Through Inoculation of Infected Erythrocytes

Plasmodium Vivax Infection

The primary objectives of this study are to assess the safety and feasibility of blood-stage controlled human P. vivax malaria infection (CHMI) in healthy adult Thai volunteers through experimental injection of cryopreserved P. vivax infected erythrocytes, and to choose the optimal inoculation dose for future P. vivax CHMI studies. In this study, blood-stage CHMI will be conducted in 8 volunteers per inoculum stock who will each be infected with P. vivax by experimental injection with cryopreserved P. vivax infected erythrocytes, which were collected from the controlled human Plasmodium vivax malaria infection model through experimental sporozoite infection in Thai adults (NCT04083508) . There are currently 2 stocks of inocula from 2 volunteers in the NCT04083508 study, which have differing quantities and stages of parasites. The total number of volunteers of this study will be up to 16 (8 volunteers per inocula stock). The volunteers will be monitored closely as in-patients in the Hospital for Tropical Diseases, and will be treated according to the Research Proposal. This study is funded by the UK Wellcome Trust. The grant reference number are Oxford/MORU: 212336/Z/18/Z and 212336/Z/18/A, and Mahidol University: 212336/A/18/Z and 212336/A/18/A.

Recruiting46 enrollment criteria

Experimental Infection of Hookworm-naïve Adults With Dermally-applied Infectious Necator Americanus...

Hookworm Infection

An experimental hookworm infection model is being developed to provide early proof-of-concept that a hookworm vaccine targeting the blood-feeding pathway of adult hookworms is feasible and efficacious. The proposed model consists of vaccinating healthy, hookworm-naïve adults with a candidate hookworm vaccine, followed by challenging them with the investigational product, Necator americanus Larval Inoculum to assess the effect of vaccination on infection. The first proposed study will be a feasibility study that will consist of administering different doses of the Necator americanus Larval Inoculum to healthy adult volunteers to determine the optimal dose (i.e., number of infectious larvae) that is safe, well-tolerated and results in consistent infection.

Recruiting28 enrollment criteria

Colonisation Efficacy of a Probiotic Chewing Gum.

Microbial Colonization

To evaluate the colonization efficacy (the ability of a probiotic bacteria to remain in the mouth) delivered in a chewing gum format. The chewing gum contains Streptococcus salivarius probiotic and the study is to be done in health adults.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

The Role of the Gastrointestinal-associated Lymphoid Tissue in the Cure of HIV Infection

HIV Infection

The objective of this study is to understand the effects of HIV cure strategies on the virus and immune cells that reside within the gastrointestinal tract. Subjects receiving therapies with the potential for HIV cure will undergo a colonoscopy to obtain gastrointestinal tissue for research assays. This study will test whether receiving these therapies will induce changes in the immune cells in the gastrointestinal tract and reduce the tissue-associated HIV viral levels.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Catheter-Associated Infection Control Training

Infection Control Training

The goal of this type of study: clinical trial is to determine the effectiveness of educational practices on catheter-associated infection control measures on surgical nurses. The main question it aims to answer are: Is there a difference between the knowledge and attitude levels of surgical nurses receiving and not receiving catheter-related infection control training on preventing peripheral and central catheter-related bloodstream infections? Is there a difference between the knowledge and attitude levels of surgical nurses receiving and not receiving catheter-related infection control training to prevent catheter-related urinary tract infections? The main tasks that the participants will be asked to do will be explained and their consent will be obtained. The two research groups will be compared.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

NPWT vs Primary Closure in SSI Prevention for Emergency Laparotomies for Peritonitis

PeritonitisSurgical Site Infection2 more

The study aims to evaluate the efficacy of negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) compared with primary closure (PC) in surgical site infection (SSI) prevention for laparotomy for peritonitis.

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Probiotic Toothpaste for Microbial Colonization

Microbial Colonization

The aim of this study is to evaluate the colonization efficacy of probiotic toothpastes in healthy adults

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

The Effect of ASTARTE™ on Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection

Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection

Investigate the effect of dietary supplements/probiotic ASTARTE™ ( L. crispatus, L. rhamnosus, L. jensenii, L. gasseri) on the microbiome composition in the intestine and vagina and thereby a reduction of risk factors for the development of rUTI during 6 months of intervention in women aged 18-40 years. This is measured by the incidence of symptomatic UTI.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Using BCG Vaccine to Understand Tuberculosis Infection

Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis (TB) is a disease that usually causes an infection in the lungs. The only vaccine to prevent TB is called BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin). BCG contains a live germ similar to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the germ that causes TB. BCG does not work very well, and TB remains the most common cause of death by infection worldwide. Human challenge models involve exposing healthy volunteers to an infectious disease in a safe and controlled way. This helps researchers understand more about an infectious disease and the body's response and can help develop new vaccines and treatments. The purpose of this study is to set up a human challenge model using BCG to understand how the body responds to this. If our human challenge model works well it may be used to help researchers develop new vaccines and tablets to treat TB in the future. This study will recruit healthy volunteers, of all genders, age 18-50 years. The first part of the study (phase A) will recruit 10 participants. Participants in phase A will receive intradermal injection with BCG into the upper arm at three times the usual dose. On day 14 after BCG the following skin samples will be taken from the BCG site with the use of local anaesthetic: skin swab, microbiopsy, skin scrape and punch biopsy. Participants in this phase of the study will also have blood tests to ensure they are safe to take part and to monitor the immune response to BCG. The overall aim of this part of the study will be to ensure BCG can be isolated (grown in culture and by molecular techniques) from participants' BCG site 14 days after the injection. The investigators aim to test whether BCG can be isolated by punch biopsy and minimally invasive techniques (microbiopsy, skin scrape and skin swab). If the investigators find that they can isolate BCG successfully using the minimally invasive methods of skin sampling and the participants have not experienced any serious adverse events, they can proceed to phase B of the study. In phase B 20 participants will be recruited. These participants will receive BCG as described for phase A. They will then have serial skin samples taken using either microbiopsy, skin scrape or skin swab on days 0, 2, 7, 14 and 28. The focus of this phase of the study is to assess immune responses to intradermal injection at the local (skin), systemic (blood) and respiratory mucosal (nose) compartments. This will involve longitudinal sampling from blood, nose and skin to measure BCG growth and the immune response over time.

Recruiting40 enrollment criteria
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