search

Active clinical trials for "Sleep Apnea Syndromes"

Results 1401-1410 of 2072

Impact of CPAP Treatment on Arterial Stiffness in Patients With T2DM and Newly Diagnosed Obstructive...

DiabetesObstructive Sleep Apnea

The purpose of the trial is to investigate the effects of three months' treatment with a CPAP-device versus control group on change in arterial stiffness in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients with newly detected Obstructive Sleep Apnoea (OSA).

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

The remedē® System for the Treatment of Central Sleep Apnea in Daily Practice

Sleep ApneaCentral Sleep Disordered Breathing

The aim of this post market study is to assess the impact of sleep-disordered breathing on the well-being of patients according to the treatment chosen, i.e. with or without implantation of the remedē® system to treat sleep-disordered breathing.

Terminated7 enrollment criteria

Economic Evaluation of Treatment Modalities for Position Dependent Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Positional Obstructive Sleep Apnea

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effect and cost-utility of a combination therapy of SPT+MAD compared with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) in patients with moderate positional obstructive sleep apnea (POSA). HYPOTHESIS: The SPT+MAD combination is more cost-effective and effective, in means of reduction of the apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), quality of life and compliance, compared with CPAP. STUDY DESIGN: A multicenter randomized clinical trial (RCT) will be performed with a follow-up of 12 months per patient. Patients will be randomized for CPAP or the combination SPT and MRA. All outcomes will be measured at baseline, month 3, 6 and 12. STUDY POPULATION: Patients diagnosed with moderate POSA according to polysomnography (PSG) results. INTERVENTION / STANDARD INTERVENTION TO BE COMPARED TO: The SPT trains POSA patients to sleep in non-supine positions, CPAP uses positive airway pressure to open the airway; MRA is an intra-oral prosthesis, which holds the mandible in a protrusive position, all to prevent effectively apneic events. OUTCOME MEASURES: AHI, compliance, quality-adjusted life year (QALY), direct and indirect costs, cardiovascular parameters, incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) SAMPLE SIZE / DATA ANALYSIS: 100 subjects in each treatment group, total of 200 patients. COST-EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS / BUDGET IMPACT ANALYSIS: The SPT is expected to improve the cost-effectiveness of overall treatment of POSA patients, and will save annually approximately 35-150 million euros.

Unknown status22 enrollment criteria

Effect of CPAP in the Worsening of Renal Function in Early Stages of Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)...

Chronic Kidney InsufficiencySleep Apnea

Objectives: Evaluate the effect of CPAP to reduce the progression of chronic kidney disease or CKD (the decline of glomerular filtration rate is ≥ 30%) in patients with early-stage renal disease and sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). Other objectives are; determine the prevalence of OSAS in patients with early-stage renal disease and evaluate the changes in inflamatories markers and endothelial damage, the state of KDIGO, cardiovascular events, mortality and cost-effectiveness analysis in CPAP group versus non-CPAP group patients. Methods: A prospective, multicentric, randomized and controlled study will be carried out for 3 years. Early-stage renal disease (G1-3 KDIGO) and OSAS patients will be included. The investigators will make a respiratory polygraphy to determinate OSAS (AHI ≥15/h) and after that, the investigators randomized patients in 2 groups; CPAP group and control group (non-CPAP treatment). Patients with AHI <15/h (non-OSAS) will be the reference group and the half of these patients, randomly chosen, will be followed up at the end of the follow up. Statistic analysis: the investigators will analyze the differences in glomerular filtration rate before and after the treatment, comparing the percentage of patients with CKD progression for both groups. The investigators will use the chi square test with raw data and adjusted for confounding variables using intention to treat analysis with imputation of missing values.

Unknown status10 enrollment criteria

"Hyaluronan" Formulation for Dry Mouth in Sleep Apnea Patients

Dry MouthXerostomia2 more

During routine clinical practice, it is observed that patients with suspected obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) often reported waking up with a dry mouth during the night or in the morning. This 9 week, cross-over group, randomized, single center, study will evaluate the efficacy of a proprietary formulation in comforting dry mouth in Sleep Apnea patients.

Unknown status17 enrollment criteria

Effects of Metoprolol and Amlodipine on Cardiac Remodeling, Arrhythmias and Blood Pressure Variation...

Sleep Apnea SyndromeHypertension

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a highly prevalent chronic sleep disorder that affects 3% to 7% in middle aged individuals and increases with age. OSA has been identified as the most common secondary cause associated with resistant hypertension. There is evidence that compared with older patients, the risk of hypertension in OSA patients may be particularly pronounced in younger adult ones (less than 50 years). Traditionally, cardiovascular risk stratification in hypertensive patients was based on the average blood pressure (BP) measured in the clinic. Accumulated data has shown that target-organ damage is related not only to 24-h mean intra-arterial BP, but also to BP variability (BPV) in subjects with essential hypertension. Growing evidence demonstrated that BPV has considerable prognostic value for all-cause mortality and cardiovascular outcomes, independent of average BP. In addition, it has been found that hypoxia condition in pneumoconiosis patients was closely associated with exaggerated BPV in ambulatory BP. However, the selections of antihypertensive drugs remain yet not very clearly for hypertensive patients combined with OSA.

Unknown status12 enrollment criteria

Titration of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Could Predict Success of Oral Appliance to Treat...

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Background: The oral appliances have been increasingly used in the treatment of primary snoring and in patients with mild obstructive sleep apnea syndrome besides being treatment options in adults with moderate to severe sleep apnea who did not accept or adapt to continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). It is not well established yet in the literature, which patients with mild to moderate OSA will present a good response to treatment with oral appliances. Objective: To determine a value of CPAP pressure that correlates with a favorable response to the use of oral appliance in patients with mild to moderate sleep apnea. Patients and Methods: Two groups of 30 male patients (25-65 years, body mass index < 35 kg/m2) will be selected: the first group with an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) between 5 and 15 events per hour of sleep and the second one with an AHI between 15 and 30 events per hour of sleep. Each patient will undergo three polysomnographic recordings (baseline, CPAP titration, after two months of treatment with oral appliance). Subjective (sleep disorders questionnaire, the Epworth Sleepiness Scale, and sleep diaries) and objective (polysomnography) parameters of sleep will be evaluated, besides the quality of life (SF-36), mood (POMS), and anthropometric measurements (neck circumference and craniofacial characteristic). Good response to treatment with the AIO will be considered as a 50% reduction in the baseline AHI index or AHI after treatment less than 5 events per hour of sleep.

Unknown status14 enrollment criteria

Artificial Neural Network Directed Therapy of Severe Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea

The investigators have developed a simple, accurate, and a point-of-care, computer-based clinical decision support system (CDSS) not only to detect the presence of sleep apnea but also to predict its severity. The CDSS is based on deploying an artificial neural network (ANN) derived from anthropomorphic and clinical characteristics. The investigators hypothesize that patients with severe OSA defined as AHI≥30 can be diagnosed with the use of ANN without undergoing a sleep study, and that empiric management with auto-CPAP has similar outcomes to those who undergo a formal sleep study.

Withdrawn9 enrollment criteria

Validation of Apnea LinkTM for Sleep Apnea Syndrome Screening in a Bariatric Population

Sleep Apnea Syndrome

Sleep apnea syndrome (OSA) frequently occurs in obese population undergoing bariatric surgery. There is a need for alternative screening tools for sleep apnea detection in the pre-operative period. The investigators would like to compare ApneaLink and complete polysomnography in this population.

Terminated5 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Sleep Disordered Breathing Following Ambulatory Surgery

Sleep Disordered Breathing

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a relatively common medical condition that includes upper-airway obstruction and consequent cessation of breathing during sleep with significant associated other medical problems. The time period around surgery has been demonstrated to be an independent risk factor for various complications but the mechanism is not well understood. This protocol proposes to study the fundamental question of what changes occur in the postoperative setting to ambulatory patients with and without OSA by administering a validated "STOP-BANG" screening questionnaire and conducting preoperative and postoperative Home Sleep Testing (HST). In doing so, critical evidence shall be gained in the understanding of postoperative sleep disorder breathing changes associated with surgery and anesthesia. With evidence, sound perioperative management recommendations and policy may be developed to assist with caring for this large and at risk surgical population.

Terminated10 enrollment criteria
1...140141142...208

Need Help? Contact our team!


We'll reach out to this number within 24 hrs