search

Active clinical trials for "Influenza, Human"

Results 1891-1900 of 1970

Impact of Influenza/RSV PCR Point-of-care Testing in the Emergency Medical Service.

Influenza

The purpose of the study is to compare Emergency Department patients who undergo influenza and RSV PCR testing using an FDA-approved point-of-care device (Cepheid Xpert® Xpress Flu/RSV) located in the ED, to patients who undergo influenza and RSV PCR testing at the core laboratory. The principal purpose is to determine if the time spent in the ED is different in the group undergoing POC influenza testing compared to those undergoing laboratory-based influenza testing.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

ECMO for COVID-19 vs Influenza A H1N1 Associated ARDS

ARDSCOVID-191 more

Objective: Veno-venous ECMO has been used as a rescue therapy for patients with severe ARDS associated to influenza A H1N1 and COVID19 viral pneumonia. Little is known about outcome of these patients who required extracorporeal support. Research question: To compare outcome of patients who required VV ECMO for Covid19 and H1N1 associated ARDS

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Procalcitonin Role in Influenza Patients With Regard to Morbidity, Mortality and Antibiotic Use...

Influenza

The investigators intend to observe the inflammatory marker procalcitonin (PCT) in comparison with patient variables on morbidity, mortality and antibiotic treatment. The overall aim is to observe if a low PCT value can have potential in reducing unessesary antibiotic use in seasonal influenza patients.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Incidence and Risk of Influenza in Myasthenic Patients

Myasthenic CrisisUpper Respiratory Infection

Upper respiratory infection , including influenza, may exacerbate the symptoms of myasthenia gravis (MG), which is an autoimmune disease that causes muscle weakness and, in some cases, can precipitate a myasthenic crisis In the present study, we investigated the incidence and risk factors of influenza infection on in myasthenia gravis patients.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Case-control Study of Pandemic A/H1N1 Influenza Risk Factors In Lebanon

A/H1N1 InfluenzaSwine Flu

The pandemic A/H1N1 virus was named "swine flu" when the current outbreak started. Although it is not yet confirmed that the index case acquired the virus from pigs, the nomenclature "swine flu" was due to the fact that the virus is triple-reassortant with genes from swine, avian, and human influenza origins. A total of 57,809 cases were reported in the WHO EMRO region, 693 of whom have died (1.2% case fatality). Lebanon had 1,838 confirmed cases with 5 deaths, it is estimated that 4% of these cases required hospitalization. Most cases of pandemic influenza presented with fever, cough, and sore throat. Other common symptoms included myalgia, headache, and rhinorrhea. The pandemic A/H1N1 virus appears to be very successful at human-to-human transmission. It is also causing infections beyond the traditional seasonal variation of previous human influenza viruses. Unlike seasonal influenza viruses that usually cause severe infections requiring hospitalization among the elderly and children under 5 years old, the pandemic A/H1N1 viruses are causing more severe illness among young adults. Several reports have associated certain underlying conditions with severe illness. Such conditions were pregnancy, asthma, diabetes, obesity, and heart disease.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Evaluating Modes of Influenza Transmission Observational Study of Community Acquired Influenza

Influenza Virus Infection Transmission in Humans

The recent swine origin influenza pandemic (2009), new emergence of swine origin H3N2v, and delayed availability of vaccine for these agents highlight the need to test and optimize public health intervention strategies to reduce transmission of influenza. We will use a new technology for biological particle collection (U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/162,395, McDevitt et al., Aerosol Sci Technol 2013) to make fundamental observations on infectious respiratory droplets in a study of up to 200 naturally occurring seasonal influenza cases. We will collect respiratory droplets shed by participants while breathing normally, talking, and spontaneously coughing. We will characterize the size distribution of droplets containing infectious virus. We will use these basic data to examine the roles of large and small respiratory droplets and examine how the interaction of host factors and virus type impact the shedding of infectious respiratory droplets. Subjects will be recruited through a web based respiratory illness surveillance system, health clinics and advertisement in the campus community. Sitting in the collection booth will not create additional discomfort or risk for volunteers already suffering from influenza infection. We will recruit up to 1000 persons with symptoms of acute respiratory illness for screening with collection of nasopharyngeal swabs and questionnaire. From among those screened, we will recruit 250 to give exhaled breath samples, and ask 50 people with influenza to return for follow up exhaled breath samples on up to two subsequent days. We hypothesize that (1) fine aerosols (<5 microns in aerodynamic diameter) will contain more viral copies than coarse aerosol particles (>= 5 microns) (2) fine aerosols will contain culturable virus indicating that the fine aerosols are infectious, (3) aerosol shedding will correlate with virus load measured by swabs, (4) presence of active cough during sampling will be associated with increased aerosol shedding, (5) clinical symptoms and signs, including fever can be used to predict viral aerosol shedding.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Immune Response to High-Dose vs. Standard Dose Influenza Vaccine

Elderly Immune System

This 5-year proposal is a randomized study of split-virus influenza vaccine (SVV) in a high-dose (HD) vs. standard-dose (SD) formulation in each of five influenza seasons to define the key determinants of vaccine-mediated protection against influenza and how these immunologic mediators may be enhanced by vaccination with a newly approved high-dose influenza vaccine in older people

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Oseltamivir Treatment on the Yield of Polymerase Chain Reaction Test for Confirmed...

Influenza

The purpose of this study is to determine the duration of viral shedding in hospitalized patients with influenza virus, treated with oseltamivir.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Viral Shedding Patterns and Clinical Outcomes of Influenza Patients

Influenza

The objective of the study is virological assessment (e.g., proportion of prolonged viral shedding, median days to viral clearance, and viral load) in laboratory-confirmed adult influenza patients admitted to the general ward and/or to the ICU and to assess the correlation with the clinical manifestations and prognosis.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

A Systematic Review of Studies of the Effect of Influenza Vaccine Against Mismatched Strains

Influenza

The purpose of this study is to consolidate the cross-protection offered by influenza vaccines against circulating influenza A or B viruses that are not antigenically well-matched to vaccine strains and to determine the degree of cross-protection separately for influenza A and influenza B, through a systematic review of the literature.

Completed7 enrollment criteria
1...189190191...197

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs