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Active clinical trials for "Lung Diseases"

Results 441-450 of 3242

Inflammatory Profiling in Chronic Lung Disease

Pulmonary Hypertension

The aim of this study is to investigate the underlying inflammatory profile in patients with chronic lung disease and determine the association pulmonary hypertension.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Vitamin D and Health Outcomes in Preterm Born Population

Vitamin D3 DeficiencyPrematurity5 more

Improved survival of very preterm newborn population during the last decades has challenged us neonatologists to study and improve nutritional practices including vitamin D (VitD) supplementation. However, long term outcome in this aspect has not been researched in well documented preterm populations. As VitD has receptors in almost all human cells it modulates growth of many organs. Therefore I start to assess VitD supplementation practices and later health outcome (bones, teeth, muscles, heart, lungs) in two preterm population cohorts cared in Oulu University Hospital at the age of 5 years and 24 years (born 2014-2017 and 1994-1997).

Recruiting3 enrollment criteria

Assessment of CFTR-Modulator Treatment in Cystic Fibrosis Lung Disease Using Novel Structural and...

Cystic Fibrosis

In this study, MRI of the lungs of healthy volunteers and participants with cystic fibrosis (stable and participants initiating CFTR modulator treatment) will be performed over a period of 6 months to determine if lung MRI is able detect structural and functional abnormalities/changes in early cystic fibrosis disease. During the 6 month period, 3 study visits will occur. 70 subjects aged 6 and older will participate in this study. Xenon MRI is a non-invasive imaging technique that does not involve x-rays or ionizing radiation. Rather, this imaging method utilizes the same hardware and software principles that are used for conventional proton MRI of patients in a hospital.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

CareCOPD - COPD Home Monitoring Study

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

This is a pilot study to demonstrate early validation of objective home-monitoring of Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients by combining accurate and relevant patient data of medication and lung function (lung impedance) through patient-facing devices.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Understanding Balance Impairment in COPD

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseHealthy Volunteers

This study is an observational study investigating the mechanisms of balance problems in people with COPD and how COPD impacts them living their daily lives. The main objectives of this study are: To quantify the relationship between balance and aspects of neuromuscular function in individuals with COPD, and compared to age-matched healthy controls To understand the lived experience of people with COPD and their carers Participants will attend an appointment at the University rehab lab to: Complete a balance test Fill out some questionnaires on mood, health status and balance and falls Complete some walking tests Have their body composition measured Have the function and strength of their leg nerves and muscles tested Researchers will compare people with COPD and healthy controls (older adults without COPD or other conditions known to impact balance) to see if any of the things measured are impacting the balance of people with COPD more than their peers without COPD. For 10 people with COPD only they will be visited at home to observe how they carry out everyday tasks and 5 of those 10 will have a follow up interview. Researchers will take notes and record interviews and look for similarities and interesting points in the notes and transcripts of the interviews to build a picture of what living with COPD is like.

Recruiting28 enrollment criteria

Parametric Response Mapping (PRM) for the Detection of Chronic Lung Injury in Hematopoietic Cell...

Chronic Lung DiseaseHematopoietic Cell Transplantation1 more

The study will have two separate patient cohorts: Cohort 1 will include patients with newly diagnosed chronic graft versus host disease (GVHD), whereas cohort 2 will include patients with newly diagnosed chronic lung disease (CLD). For cohort 1, the primary objective will be to characterize PRM metrics at the onset of chronic GVHD and determine if a PRM signature is present that will predict 1-year CLD free survival. For cohort 2, the primary objective will focus on characterizing PRM at the onset of CLD and determine if PRM can predict the trajectory in lung function decline in affected patients.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis and Serum Bank

Idiopathic Pulmonary FibrosisLung Diseases1 more

Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is the most common form of chronic idiopathic diffuse interstitial lung disease (DILD) in adults. It is a fibroproliferative, irreversible disease of unknown cause, usually progressive, occurring mainly from the age of 60 and limited to the lungs. IPF is a serious disease with a median survival rate at diagnosis of 3 years. The aim of the study is to set up a biocollection of serum from patients in a context of idiopathic DILD and a possible or confirmed diagnosis of common interstitial lung disease by chest CT. Patients will be recruited at the consultations of the Rennes Rare Lung Disease Competence Centre. These will be patients in stable condition or in acute exacerbation of IPF.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Predict&Prevent: Use of a Personalised Early Warning Decision Support System to Predict and Prevent...

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

COPD is a common complex disease with debilitating breathlessness; mortality and reduced quality of life, accelerated by frequent lung attacks (exacerbations). Changes in breathlessness, cough and/or sputum production often change before exacerbations but patients cannot judge the importance of such changes so they remain unreported and untreated. Remote monitoring systems have been developed but none have yet convincingly shown the ability to identify these early changes of an exacerbation and how severe they can be. This study asks if a smart digital health intervention (COPDPredict™) can be used by both COPD patients and clinicians to improve self-management, predict lung attacks early, intervene promptly, and avoid hospitalisation. COPDPredict™ consists of a patient-facing App and clinician-facing smart early warning decision support system. It collects and processes information to determine a patient's health through a combination of wellbeing scores, lung function and biomarker measurements. This information is combined to generate personalised lung health profiles. As each patient is monitored over time, the system detects changes from an individual's 'usual health' and indicates the likelihood of imminent exacerbation of COPD. When this happens, alerts are sent to both the individual and the clinician, with instructions to the patient on what actions to take. Any advice from clinicians can be exchanged via the App's secure messaging facility. If patients have followed the action plan but fail to improve or if an episode triggers an 'at high risk alert', clinicians are further prompted to case manage and intervene with escalated treatment, including home visits, if necessary. The COPDPredict™ intervention aims to assist patients and clinicians in preventing clinical deterioration from COPD exacerbations with prompt appropriate intervention. This study will randomise 384 patients who have frequent exacerbations, from hospitals in the West Midlands, to either (1) standard self-management plan (SSMP) with rescue medication (RM), or (2) COPDPredict™ and RM.

Active9 enrollment criteria

Prevalence of Urinary Incontinence and Evaluation of Related Factors in Patients With COPD

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseUrinary Incontinence

Urinary incontinence (UI) is defined as involuntary urinary incontinence. In women with COPD, chronic coughing can often lead to UI. In this patient group, incontinence may be related to functional impairment, concomitant diseases and medications used. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of urinary incontinence in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and the factors that may be associated with urinary incontinence. The study included individuals who applied to the Pulmonary Diseases Policlinic of SANKO University Sani Konukoğlu Practice and Research Hospital and followed up with the diagnosis of COPD. The age, sex, height, weight, education level, smoking, exercise habits, fluid intake, medications and accompanying diseases such as heart disease, hypertension and diabetes will be recorded. Any prolapse or surgery will be questioned and noted. The disease severity will be determined by the forced expiratory volume (FEV1) value of the first second obtained from pulmonary function tests. Dyspnea score will also be determined by the Modified British Research Council (MBRC). Symptoms will be evaluated with the COPD Assessment Test (CAT). For urinary incontinence, the ICIQ-SF (International Urinary Incontinence Consultation) Questionnaire and Urinary Distress Inventory will be applied. In addition, the Leicester Cough Questionnaire will be used to assess your coughing functions, and the Activity-Self Assessment will be performed to determine the individual activity adequacy and the value of activities for individuals. All evaluations will be done only once with the help of the physiotherapist and asking the questions and recording the answers of the individual.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Multi-elemental Imaging of Lung Tissues With LIBS (Laser-induced Breakdown Spectroscopy)

Interstitial Lung DiseaseSarcoidosis1 more

Evaluate the feasibility of performing a multi-elemental imaging analysis of lung specimens from patients with ILDs, with an technology named LIBS (Laser Induced-Breakdown Spectroscopy)

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria
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