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Active clinical trials for "Sleep Apnea Syndromes"

Results 1951-1960 of 2072

Sleep Disordered Breathing in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure

Sleep-disordered BreathingChronic Heart Failure

Only few prospective studies systematically investigated the prevalence of sleep disordered breathing in patients with stable chronic heart failure. Furthermore there is no report on the incidence rate of sleep disordered breathing in this population. This is a prospective multi-centre study of sleep-disordered breathing in 200 patients with stable moderate-to-severe chronic heart failure. Eligible patients will undergo overnight full-night polysomnography, lung function testing, laboratory measurements, and hemodynamic recordings. Measurements will be repeated at 6 months interval for a follow-up period of two years irrespective of the presence or absence of sleep disordered breathing. The primary outcome variable for this study is the prevalence of sleep disordered breathing in the study population. Secondary outcome variables include the 2-year incidence rate of sleep disordered breathing, quality of life measurements, exercise capacity, sleep quality, hemodynamic measurements, and laboratory markers of neurohumoral activation, systemic inflammation, and endothelial function in the study population.

Unknown status21 enrollment criteria

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome and Attention Executive Function Disturbances

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Studies demonstrate that sleep disturbances are associated with cognitive dysfunction and attention deficit. However the correlation between the severity of obstructive sleep apnea and the degree of cognitive dysfunction was not demonstrated. Our hypothesis is that patients suffering from a more severe sleep apnea will demonstrate a greater degree of cognitive dysfunction.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

The Impact of Obstructive Sleep Apnea on the Outcomes in Patients of First-Time Acute Myocardial...

Sleep ApneaObstructive1 more

Objective: Untreated OSA is associated with three fold risk of fetal and non-fetal cardiovascular events than control subjects in the long-term follow up. However, the prevalence rate and impact of OSA in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) was not clear so far. The conflicts of studies come from variable period of AMI, heart function at enrollment, techniques used to diagnose OSA, time to revascularization, and target endpoint. Therefore, this project aimed to study the patients of first-time, Killip I-II, and post primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) AMI in both and chronic phase to achieve four goals: Aim 1. To determine the prevalence rate of OSA in patients with first-time AMI The acute phase of AMI was defined as within 14 days of the onset of AMI and the chronic phase was defined as > 14 days of onset. Eligible patients were screened with polysomnography within 5th to 7th days and 6th months of AMI to determine the prevalence rate of OSA in the AMI. Patients who had AHI more than 15/hr were considered as suffering from OSA. Aim 2. To identify the clinical characteristics and risk factors in AMI patients associated with OSA Patients were followed up at clinics for five years. The baseline demographics of patients with or without OSA were compared to determine the factors associated with OSA in AMI patients. Aim 3. To study the impact of OSA on the prognosis of AMI patients after revascularizaton The primary endpoint was mortality rate and cardiac events. The secondary endpoint was left ventricular function and variables related to cardiovascular disease (CVD) and metabolic syndrome. The impact of OSA on AMI was determined by comparing primary and secondary endpoint between AMI patients with and without OSA. Aim 4. To identify the clinical and molecular factors attributing to AMI in OSA patients Factors attributing to AMI in OSA patients were determined by comparing the clinical data and mRNA expression of angiogenesis and other related genes in OSA patients with the acute phase of AMI and patients without major CVD.

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

Leukotrienes Pathway in Chinese Children With Sleep-disordered Breathing

Sleep-disordered Breathing

Our goals are to demonstrate an active leukotrienes (LTs) mediated inflammatory response is involved in pathophysiology of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB), and to provide a theoretical evidence for LTs modify therapy in treating pediatric patients with SDB. The investigators have hypothesized that the pathophysiology of pediatric SDB involves specific systemic and local upper airway inflammatory response mediated by LTs. LT concentration assays reveal higher levels in serum for both leukotriene B4 (LTB4) and cysteinyl leukotrienes (CysLTs) and in morning urine for LTE4 of SDB children, in comparison to healthy ones, and LTs productions emerge disease severity-dependent increases. There is a positive correlation between LTs production and other systemic markers such as neutrophil counts and high sensitive C-reactive protein (hsCRP). Children with SDB have higher leukotriene receptor-1 (LT1-R) and leukotriene receptor-2 (LT2-R) expressions in adenotonsillar tissues of SDB children compared to recurrent infectious tonsillitis subjects. Levels of LTs are positively correlated with body mass index (BMI) z-score, waist height ratio (WHtR), adenotonsillar size and polysomnography (PSG) indices including apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), obstructive apnea index (OAI), oxygen desaturation index (ODI), arousal index, percentage of time spend saturation lower than 90% (SLT90%) and negatively correlated with mean and minimal pulse oximetric saturation (SpO2), which indicates synergistic role of obesity and hypoxia are the determinants of LTs production in SDB. In adenotonsillar mixed cell culture system, the addition of LTs can increase cellular proliferation rates and exhibit dose-dependent responses, whereas leukotriene receptor antagonists (LTRAs) elicit dose-dependent cellular reductions.

Unknown status7 enrollment criteria

The Role of Clinical Parameters in Predicting the Severity of Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Obstructive Sleep ApneaSnoring

Investigate the role of clinical parameters in predicting the severity of obstructive sleep apnea

Unknown status2 enrollment criteria

The Effect of Sildenafil on Sleep-Disordered Breathing in Obese Patients With Sexual Dysfunction...

SildenafilSleep Apnea2 more

Sildenafil has been shown to aggravate sleep-disordered breathing in patients with severe obstructive sleep apnea. The aim of the present study is to examine the frequency of sleep-disordered breathing in obese patients who are candidates for treatment with sildenafil for sexual dysfunction. In addition we wish to assess the effect of sildenafil on sleep-disordered breathing.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

The Brain Changes in Sleep Apnea Study

SleepSleep Apnea1 more

Sleep is critical to human health, but insufficient and disrupted sleep caused by sleep apnea are common and have a major impact on brain health. However, there is still much that is not known about how sleep apnea damages the brain and what can be done to fix this. The Brain Changes in Sleep Apnea Study will look at the brain health of people with severe sleep apnea both before and after 4 months of treatment with a CPAP machine. Pre- and post-CPAP treatment, 80 participants with severe sleep apnea will undergo cognitive testing, blood and urine tests, a pulse wave velocity test, and an MRI. Also pre- and post-CPAP treatment, participants will wear a blood pressure monitor for 24 hours, wear an accelerometer watch for 8 nights to track the duration and quality of their sleep, and wear a device for 1 night of sleep to assess their breathing and blood oxygen levels. It is expected that there will be improvements in participants' brain health after 4 months of CPAP treatment.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

ScreenOX - An Automated At-home Screening Test for Adult Sleep Apnea Using Nocturnal Oximetry

Sleep Apnea Syndromes

The sleep apnea-hypopnea syndrome (SAHS) is a respiratory disorder characterized by frequent breathing cessations (apneas) or partial collapses (hypopneas) during sleep. SAHS is linked with the most important causes of death in adults from industrialized countries. Metabolic deregulation and cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases, such as atrial fibrillation, stroke, myocardial infarction and sudden cardiac death, could affect people having untreated SAHS. The gold standard method for SAHS diagnosis is in-hospital, technician-attended nocturnal polysomnography (PSG). Nevertheless, this methodology is labor-intensive, time-consuming, and relatively unavailable, especially in low-resource settings. These drawbacks have led to large waiting lists, which delay diagnosis and treatment and limits its effectiveness as single diagnostic method for SAHS. Blood oxygen saturation (SpO2) and pulse rate (PR) from nocturnal pulse oximetry (NPO) provide relevant and essential information to detect apneas. In addition, it is significantly less intrusive for patients and it can be easily recorded at patients' home. In the same way, automated signal processing and pattern recognition techniques have demonstrated to provide accurate tools able to detect and effectively use this information. Therefore, the investigators hypothesize that automated pattern recognition of at-home NPO recordings could provide reliable and efficient tools able to simplify the management of SAHS. The aim of this study is two-fold: 1) to prospectively assess the reliability and effectiveness of at-home NPO in the context of adult SAHS; 2) to design, optimize and extensively assess the diagnostic performance of automated NPO-based screening tools for SAHS. In order to achieve these goals, both PSG and NPO recordings are carried out ambulatory and simultaneously at patient's home. A portable polysomnograph (Embletta MPR, Natus) is used for standard PSG at home, whereas a portable wrist-worn pulse oximeter (WristOX2 3150, Nonin) is used for ambulatory NPO. In addition, conventional in-lab PSG and attended pulse oximetry are also performed simultaneously in the hospital facilities.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

Impact of Sleep Apnea on Sepsis Mortality

Sleep Apnea SyndromesSepsis1 more

By clinical record review, this retrospective study aims to compare the mortality of sepsis patients with versus without obstructive sleep apnea, who were diagnosed and treated in Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Diabetic Macular Edema - Obstructive Sleep Apnea Relationship Study

Diabetic Macular EdemaSleep Apnea1 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the relationship between DME and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). OSA impacts millions of North Americans, many of whom are undiagnosed. The investigators aim to evaluate if a relationship exists between the two diseases, whether or not the severity of OSA impacts the severity of DME, and whether treating OSA results in better treatment outcomes for DME. The study will involve the standard of care provided for both DME (involving anti-VEGF injections) and OSA (involving continuous positive airway pressure [CPAP] machine).Approximately 150 subjects are expected to be enrolled in this study. In summary: Question 1: Is there a correlation between DME and OSA? Question 2: Is there a relationship between the severity of DME (CRT and vision) and OSA (AHI index)? Question 3: Does treating OSA result in improving DME metrics, and does it neutralize the outcomes at 1 year compared to OSA negatives.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria
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