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Active clinical trials for "Respiration Disorders"

Results 371-380 of 437

Sleep Respiratory Disorders Evaluation in Sickle Cell Disease Children

Sickle Cell DiseaseRespiration Disorders

In Sickle cell disease children, sleep respiratory abnormalities are risk factors for vaso-occlusive complications, as well as cerebral vasculopathy. A 18 months follow-up children with sickle cell disease evaluating sleep respiratory problems frequency and etiology, as well as their influence on sickle cell disease complications.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Is Gait Speed and Sarcopenia Prognostic in Chronic Respiratory Disease?

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease and Allied Conditions

This study aims to assess usual walking speed (4-metre gait speed) and markers of sarcopenia predict mortality in patients with chronic respiratory disease.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Phenotyping the Chronic Respiratory Diseases (CRD) in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Chronic Respiratory Diseases

World Health Organization (WHO) considers chronic respiratory disease (CRD) as one of its four priorities. These diseases include asthma and rhinitis, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPD), occupational lung diseases, sleep apnoea syndromes, pulmonary hypertension, bronchiectasis and interstitial lung diseases. They constitute a serious public health problem in all countries throughout the world, in particular in low and middle income countries and in deprived populations. Hundreds of millions of people of all ages, in all countries of the world, are affected by chronic respiratory diseases. More than 50% of them live in low and middle income countries. Over 90% of deaths and the complete inability, due to CRDs occur in countries with low or middle incomes. The main causes of CRD are: tobacco smoke, occupational factors, indoor air pollution and outdoor air pollution, allergens, sequelae of respiratory infections such as tuberculosis. More than 30% of the population of Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) could develop a CRD. In fact, 15% of children and 7% of adults could become asthma and 6% of the population could become COPD due to smoking. Children exposed to fumes from biomass burning, early in their life, seem to have a higher risk to develop COPD. The high level of air pollution in HCMC could aggravate asthma / COPD. Populations combining the rural risk (exposure to smoke from biomass) and the urban risk (smoking, pollution) may develop COPD much earlier (before age 40). Among the 9 million people in HCMC, 50% of the population is rural origin. Within this population, parasites could play a protective role against the risk of allergic asthma and consequently, the better control of helminthiasis among urban population, may result in allergic diseases such as asthma and anaphylaxis. Finally, the sequelae of tuberculosis (incidence is 200/100000) could participate to the morbidity of COPD / CRD. Study granted by the ARES-CUD ("Comission universitaire au développement")

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Non-invasive Detection of Pneumonia in Context of Covid-19 Using Gas Chromatography - Ion Mobility...

COVID-19Respiratory Disease

On Dec 31, 2019, a number of viral pneumonia cases were reported in China. The virus causing pneumonia was then identified as a new coronavirus called SARS-CoV-2. Since this time, the infection called coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has spread around the world, causing huge stress for health care systems. To diagnose this infection, throat and nose swabs are taken. Unfortunately, the results often take more than 24 hrs to return from a laboratory. Speeding diagnosis up would be of great help. This study aims to look at the breath to find signs that might allow clinicians to diagnose the coronavirus infection at the bedside, without needing to send samples to the laboratory. To do this, the team will be using a machine called a BreathSpec which has been adapted to fit in the hospital for this purpose.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Pandemic Triage Score in Patients With Known or Suspected Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)...

SARS-CoV-2 Acute Respiratory DiseaseCovid19

During this pandemic period, the goal of the health care system is to optimize the use of intensive care services for patients infected with SARS-CoV-2, given the frequency of complications that can lead to high mortality. When patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 are admitted to hospital, whether or not they are symptomatic, there is currently no method to predict who will progress to complications requiring the use of intensive measures in 24-48 hours.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Luftibus in the School: a Study on the Respiratory Health of Schoolchildren.

Respiratory Disease

This study assessed the respiratory health of schoolchildren from the canton of Zurich by combining self-reported information on respiratory symptoms with lung function test results and air pollution measurements. Luftibus in the school (LUIS) is a population-based study conducted in the canton of Zurich, Switzerland. Between the years 2013 and 2016 a bus with equipment for lung function testing and air pollution measurement visited numerous schools across the canton Zurich. The parents of the schoolchildren filled in a questionnaire with validated questions on upper and lower respiratory symptoms, trigger factors, diagnosis, treatment of respiratory symptoms, health behavior and environmental factors. The children were interviewed using a shorter questionnaire. Fieldworkers measured lung function (spirometry and double tracer gas single-breath washout) and an airway inflammation test (fractional exhaled nitric oxide) in the bus. The recruited population included 3500 schoolchildren aged 6 to 16 years from the canton of Zurich. Respiratory symptoms and their influence on physical activity and sleep have a strong impact on children's quality of life and school performance. The results of this study will provide new insights on schoolchildren's respiratory health that may help to establish new recommendations and influence policy makers' decisions.

Completed3 enrollment criteria

Follow-Up Study of People Treated for Scoliosis

Breast and Other Cancer Incidence and MortalityAll Cause Mortality2 more

Background: Scoliosis is a curving of the spine. It usually happens in girls when they are children and teens. Doctors often use x-rays to diagnose it. The x-rays give low radiation. This may increase the risk that those young women get cancer later in life. Researchers want to learn more about this risk. They will look data that has already been collected. Objectives: To study cancer risks of repeated low radiation from x-rays for scoliosis. Also, to study death risks related to certain scoliosis patient characteristics. These include causes, kinds of curvature, and kinds of treatment. Eligibility: Medical records of women from past scoliosis studies. Design: This U.S. Scoliosis Cohort includes more than 5,000 women who were diagnosed between 1912 and 1965. Data were collected on these women in the 1980s and 1990s. These came from medical records, radiology log books, and x-ray films. Researchers found out where participants were, including if they were dead. Some women were given a follow-up questionnaire. Researchers want to find out where participants are today. They want to identify new deaths of participants. They want to find out their causes of death. This data will be added to other databases.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

TRACK: Validation of the Portuguese Version

AsthmaRespiratory Disease

The TRACK ("Test for Respiratory and Asthma Control in Kids") questionnaire is a validated instrument to evaluate the control of respiratory symptoms in young children. The TRACK questionnaire was developed in English and a version in Portuguese is not available or validated, purpose of the present project.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Pulmonary Function Test Study - Automated Interpretation

Respiratory Disease

A multicentric study to explore variability when clinicians are intrepreting lung function tests. Comparison with results of in-house built software for automatic interpretation.

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Pulmonary Disease in Patients Referred for Coronary CT

Coronary Artery DiseaseAtheroscleroses2 more

Several studies show an association between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and coronary artery disease (CAD). Besides risk factors such as smoking, both are associated with physical inactivity, advanced age and systemic inflammation The use of coronary computed tomography (CCT) with multiple detectors is a diagnostic method for coronary disease, describing the anatomy and severity of arterial obstruction. One way of estimating the cardiovascular risk is coronary calcium score (CCS). Due to the association between COPD and CAD, it is likely that many patients with IHD diagnosed by CT have reduced lung function. The aim of this observational study is to establish the correlation between the CCS and lung function. It will also correlate the presence of irreversible airway obstruction with significant coronary lesions. Patients over 40 years referred to CCT who agree to participate in the study will perform a spirometry with bronchodilator and collect a blood sample to measure serum markers of inflammation and cardiovascular risk (glycemia, lipid profile, C reactive protein (CRP), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-Alpha) and fibrinogen). The data will be compared in the general population and in subgroups: smokers, former smokers and nonsmokers. One year after the CCT patients will be contacted by the investigators and accessed for emergency room visits, hospital admissions and fatal or nonfatal coronary or respiratory events. The investigators hypothesis is that reduced lung function is independently associated with elevated CCS and is, also a risk factor for increased hospital admission and coronary events. The concomitant assessment of lung function and CCS can contribute knowledge about the epidemiological association between pulmonary disease and CAD. This can also add to evidence for the use of spirometry as a marker of cardiovascular risk.

Completed8 enrollment criteria
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