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Active clinical trials for "Sleep Apnea Syndromes"

Results 211-220 of 2072

Long COVID-19 Fatigue and Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Long COVIDFatigue1 more

Identify the relationship of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) prevalence with post-COVID-19 fatigue that remains at least six months after acute disease

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Cost-effectiveness Analysis and Conditional Response to the Effect of Positional Devices in Obstructive...

Obstructive Sleep Apnea of Adult

The objectives of this study are: To assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a vibrating positional device (NightBalance, Philips) in the treatment of positional obstructive sleep apnea compared to conventional CPAP treatment. To investigate whether a positional device (NightBalance, Philips) avoids supine position after a period of use of the device without actively using the device for a subsequent period of time.

Not yet recruiting17 enrollment criteria

Sociological Determinants of Positive Airway Pressure Adherence in OSA Patients

AdherenceTreatment2 more

Monocentric, prospective, opened study to evaluate the impact of Health Literacy Levels on CPAP withdrawal in Obstructive Sleep Apnea patients within 6 months of inclusion.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Ultrasound Versus Clinical Tests as Predictors of Difficult Endotracheal Intubation in Patients...

Difficult Intubation in Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is the most serious kind of the sleep-disordered breathing group, characterised by recurrent episodes of partial to complete obstruction of the upper airway resulting in inefficient alveolar gas exchange and desaturation[1]. It is a commonly encountered condition with a reported prevalence of 9-25% in the general population [2]. However, the majority of OSA patients presenting for surgery remain undiagnosed or untreated[3], contributing to a high rate of unexpected adverse airway outcome[4]. The various airway abnormalities represented by OSA include a large tongue, collapsible airway and crowding of the oropharyngeal structures, among others[5]. Accurate airway assessment should always be performed so as to provide appropriate planning and management of expected difficult intubation, but the common clinical screening tests (Mallampati score, inter-incisor distance, mento-hyoid distance, BMI, etc ) have shown low sensitivity and specificity with a limited predictive value, especially if only a single assessment method is used[6]. Ultrasonography could be a highly sensitive and specific tool for prediction of difficult intubation in OSA patients presented for elective surgery by measuring tongue base thickness, distance between lingual arteries, hyo-mental distance and condylar mobility.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

A Brief Lifestyle Modification Programme in Overweight Subjects With Obstructive Sleep Apnoea -...

Obstructive Sleep ApnoeaOverweight

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a common chronic disease and associated with cardiovascular and neurocognitive sequelae. Overweight is a common, reversible risk factor of OSA, and the rapid rise in obesity worldwide may lead to increases in OSA and related adverse health outcomes. Weight-loss interventions, especially comprehensive lifestyle interventions, are associated with improvements in OSA severity, cardiometabolic comorbidities, and quality of life. However, the intensive nature of these programmes often pose a barrier to adherence. Furthermore, although there is strong evidence to support the value of mobile text messaging to promote physical activity and healthy eating in clinical and community settings, messaging has rarely been applied in interventions for overweight OSA subjects. The proposed study aims to examine the feasibility of a brief lifestyle modification programme that makes use of smartphone technology (WhatsApp or WeChat) to empower subjects to start doing simple and easy-to-do exercises that can be easily integrated into daily life for gradual lifestyle change.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Belgian Central Sleep Apnea REgistry

Central Sleep Apnea

This study evaluates different factors that determine the treatment choice and treatment compliance in patients with central sleep apnea. All patients will receive routine care (registry).

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Treating Children With Obstructive Sleep Apnea After Surgery Failure

Pediatric Obstructive Sleep ApneaPediatric Obesity

The aim of this study is to evaluate the potential improvement of sleep quality in children who have residual obstructive sleep apnea, using either an orthodontic intervention or continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), versus no treatment.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Evaluation of Self-efficacy as a Predictor for CPAP-compliance in a OSAS-patients French Cohort...

Sleep ApneaObstructive

Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) is the reference treatment for obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) and is effective in improving symptoms of OSAS, reducing risk of accidents and improving quality of life. However, CPAP use is less than optimal. Recommended use is between 6-8 hour per night and a common clinical and empiric benchmark has been defined for CPAP use as an average of 4h per night for 70% of the night. Approximatively 30% of patients discontinue CPAP treatment during the first weeks. Thus, it is very important to identify the factors that influence CPAP adherence during the first weeks of treatment. Biomedical factors, in particular nose respiratory abnormalities, somnolence complaints and insomnia complaints, have been widely studied but explain only 4 to 25 % of the variance in CPAP use. Interestingly, "self-efficacy" (the confidence to engage in a treatment), was found to explain more than 30 % of the variance in CPAP use. The SEMSA (Self Efficacy in Sleep apnea) questionnaire is the instrument to investigate self-efficacy related to OSAS and CPAP that has received the most attention. Retrospective studies showed that the factor "self-efficacy" of the SEMSA was related to poor CPAP adherence. Prospective studies showed that the factor "self-efficacy" of the SEMSA at baseline was associated with future CPAP use when it was completed after education information. A French version of the SEMSA has been validated by investigators in a retrospective study. They have confirmed in France that the factor "self-efficacy" of the SEMSA was related to poor CPAP adherence. No prospective study using the SEMSA has been conducted in French patients with OSAS treated with CPAP. Given the specificity of the French health care system and home care system, it is thus important to evaluate the predictive value of self-efficacy on CPAP adherence in France. The generation of predictive model would enable pretreatment prediction of those likely to have difficulty with CPAP adherence, and would serve as the basis for the development of maximally effective interventions in order to enhance CPAP adherence by patients with OSAS.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Development of a Wearable Point of Care Monitoring Device for Pediatric Obstructive Sleep Apnea...

Pediatric Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Background: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) occurs when the blockage of the airway causes a person to stop breathing involuntarily for 10 seconds or more throughout the night during sleep. Pediatric OSA can be especially concerning and can have long-term effects. Researchers want to see how a monitoring device called near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) compares with the traditional techniques used in children s sleep studies. Objective: To learn about oxygen levels in the brain and limbs in children with and without sleep apnea using a wearable, point-of-care biosensor. Eligibility: Children aged 3-12 who have OSA and plan to receive treatment (OSA group) or who do not have OSA (NORM group). Design: Participants will be screened with a review of their medical records. If they have taken part in other NIH studies, that data will be reviewed as well. Participants in the NORM group will have 1 overnight study visit. Those in the OSA group will have 2 overnight study visits. Participants will do an overnight sleep study. They will have a physical exam and medical history. They will have a sleep study electroencephalography (EEG). For this, electrodes will be placed on their head. They will wear a gauze cap to keep the electrodes in place. Two NIRS probes made of a soft silicon will be placed on their forehead and arm. They will follow their normal bedtime routine. Their parent will stay overnight. The OSA group will have a second study visit 2 weeks to 12 months after they start treatment for their sleep apnea. They will repeat the sleep study.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

An 18-year Follow-up Study on OSA in a Population-based Cohort

EpidemiologyNatural History3 more

Our research team has established a polysomnography (PSG) quantified population-based paediatric sleep cohort in 2003 for a childhood OSA prevalence study. Subjects were recruited from 13 randomly selected primary schools. All subjects from this original cohort will be invited to join this 18-year follow-up study to repeat the following data collection: questionnaires, anthropometric measurement, sleep study, 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) measurement, echocardiography and neurocognitive assessment.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria
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