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Active clinical trials for "Sleep Apnea Syndromes"

Results 261-270 of 2072

Clinical Characteristics of Patients With Sleep Apnea in Korea

Sleep Apnea Syndromes

Sleep-disordered breathing including obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is an extremely common medical disorder associated with important morbidity. The purpose of this study is to understand the clinical features and course of patients with sleep apnea in Korea. Participants who are suspected of sleep apnea due to symptoms such as snoring, witnessed apneas, waking up with a choking sensation, excessive sleepiness, non-restorative sleep, difficulty initiating or maintaining sleep, fatigue or tiredness, and morning headache will be prospectively recruited at the outpatient clinic of Seoul National University Hospital. After polysomnography (PSG) or respiratory polygraphy, patients with sleep apnea including OSA and central sleep apnea (CSA) will be followed regularly. Participants not having sleep apnea (apnea-hypopnea index < 5/hour) will only have a baseline visit. For only participants with the informed consent of donating blood, their blood samples will be collected and stored in the Seoul National University Hospital-Human Biobank (SNUH-HUB).

Recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Head to Head Comparison of Upper Airway Stimulation and Continuous Positive Airway Pressure; a Pilot...

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

To date, there has been no head to head comparison of Upper Airway Stimulation (UAS) and Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) utilizing a full night polysomnographic evaluation. With this study we aim to evaluate a pilot cohort of patients with OSA treated with CPAP or UAS using the WatchPAT polysomnography system.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Validation of an Integrated Digital Solution (SUNrise®) Versus Polysomnography for Obstructive Sleep...

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Validation of an integrated digital solution (SUNrise®) of mandibular movement automatic analysis by artificial intelligence versus polysomnography for obstructive sleep apnea diagnosis: a prospective, randomized, parallel-arm, open-label, multicenter, national, controlled study.

Active9 enrollment criteria

Novel physIologiC prEdictors of Positive Airway Pressure Effectiveness

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Millions of Americans suffer from high blood pressure, diabetes, strokes and motor vehicle accidents due to ineffective treatment of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Our preliminary data suggest that physiological causes of OSA such as easy arousability (low arousal threshold) or unstable breathing control (high loop gain) may influence effectiveness of OSA's most common treatment, continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). The NICE-PAP study will examine how the physiologic traits that cause OSA in each individual impact CPAP effectiveness and can lead to personalized OSA treatments that improve patient lives.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Apnea, Stroke and Incident Cardiovascular Events

StrokeSleep-disordered Breathing7 more

This prospective cohort study aims to compare the proportion of cardiac or cerebrovascular events after a first stroke, a first transient ischemic attack (TIA) or recurrent TIA, between sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) and non-SDB (control) patients, one year after SDB diagnosis, performed 3 months after stroke onset. The primary outcome is a composite endpoint composed of cardiac or cerebrovascular events regrouping: death from any cardiac or cerebrovascular cause, non-fatal stroke, and non-fatal acute coronary disease. 1620 patients, in the acute phase of a first stroke, TIA or recurrent TIA will be included in the cohort. Clinical, neuroimaging, sensorimotor, cognitive and biological parameters will be collected at inclusion. Three months after stroke or TIA onset, polysomnography will be performed for SDB diagnosis. Patients will be considered as having SDB for an Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) > 15 events/hour, or to the control group otherwise. The same clinical, imaging, cognitive and biological assessments than during the first visit will be performed; incident (new) cardiovascular events will be collected. Three months later, and at 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years after SDB diagnosis, the same clinical, cognitive, sensorimotor, and sleep-related evaluations will be performed. In addition to the aforementioned parameters, incident cardiovascular outcomes will be collected, at the same time points. The primary study outcome will be retrieved one year after stroke onset.

Recruiting14 enrollment criteria

Virtual Surgery of the Upper Airways

Sleep ApneaObstructive

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a sleep related breathing disorder caused by repetitive collapses of the upper airways resulting in impaired breathing, oxygen desaturation and sleep disturbances. OSA has a massive impact on global health contributing directly to cardiovascular diseases, insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome and daytime fatigue and is repeatedly associated with an increase in motor vehicle accidents. The mainstay of treatment is still the use of positive airway pressure or surgery of the upper airways, but the success rate is persistently low. Surgery may be of help, but there is a lack of patient-specific options in both diagnostics and treatment. Mathematical and computational modeling is expected to provide significant insight into the airway function and onset of OSA. This study is part of a project that will rely on biomedical engineering to obtain the required insight to produce software tools for computer-aided diagnostics and treatment of OSA.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Obstructive Sleep Apnea Among Somali-Americans

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

The investigators seek to advance the understanding of obstructive sleep apnea as it relates to different ethnic origins as well as sex differences. The investigators will compare Somali patients with known obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) to individuals without OSA, and to individuals of other ethnic/racial origins to determine the risk factors (genetic and/or physiologic) associated with developing cardiovascular diseases. This will help the investigators to understand the unique sleep pathology of individuals of African descent.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Airway Muscle Activation on Sleep-disordered Breathing Events

Sleep Apnea

The standard for treatment for people suffering from obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) syndrome involves the use of Continuous, or Automatic Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP, APAP) machines, which work by delivering air via tubing and mask to a patient at pressures of up to 20cmH2O. This increased pressure is meant to stabilize the airway to reduce obstruction events. APAP machines are generally more effective and more comfortable for patients than CPAP machines because these devices automatically adjust pressure to treat an apnea. As a result of the high rate of patient dissatisfaction with conventional PAP therapy, alternative treatments for sleep apnea have been developed. One therapeutic target for OSA is stimulation of the genioglossus muscle, a phasic respiratory muscle important in maintaining upper airway patency. Recently, it has been shown that genioglossus reflex responses can be achieved through the application of negative pressure pulses as well as changes in airway pressure. These studies focused on activating pressure-sensitive mechanoreceptors within the upper airway known to contribute to genioglossus activity. Together, these studies have demonstrated that both brief pulses of negative airway pressure and changes in airway pressure are capable of eliciting genioglossus reflex responses. The goal of this interventional study is to evaluate the potential of airway muscle activation on sleep-disordered breathing during sleep therapy by applying brief maneuvers of air pressure using existing pressure and flow sensors in conventional CPAP machines.

Not yet recruiting17 enrollment criteria

AcuPebble to Remotely Monitor Patients With OSA on CPAP Therapy

Sleep ApneaObstructive

Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is a breathing problem that happens when you sleep. It is treated by a machine called continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy. The goal of this observational trial is to test how well a new wearable device can detect ongoing OSA in patients undergoing treatment with CPAP. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does the new wearable device detect OSA in patients undergoing treatment with CPAP as well as gold standard sleep studies? Does the new wearable device detect OSA in patients undergoing treatment with CPAP more accurately than the CPAP machine can itself. Participants will be asked to wear the following two devices while using their CPAP machine for 2 nights: AcuPebble SA100 (the new wearable device). This device is the size of a 2-pence coin and sits on the front of the neck and attaches via some double sided sticky tape. It is connected via bluetooth to a mobile phone application (app). A multi-channel sleep study, which is the gold standard way of performing sleep studies. Researchers will then compare how much OSA is left in participants, comparing the values from the new device, gold standard sleep study and the CPAP machine itself.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

Endotype-Targeted Therapy to Rescue OSA Patients Struggling With CPAP Adherence (TOP-CPAP)

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

More than 10% of the US population have obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). Standard of care is therapy with CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) which virtually eliminates OSA. However, most patients use CPAP only for part of the night (4-5hours) and about 50% patients discontinue CPAP long-term. Alternative therapies are limited, thus many OSA patients remain at risk of OSA sequelae (e.g. sleepiness, memory issues, high blood pressure, etc.). Importantly, different patients get OSA for different reasons, and recent data show that some of the underlying causes of OSA ("endotypes") such as having a low arousal threshold (i.e. waking up easily) are associated with lower CPAP adherence. Using a randomized controlled trial design, this will be the first study using a targeted intervention to manipulate the underlying OSA causes (i.e., giving a safe hypnotic to patients with OSA to increase the arousal threshold) to test the hypothesis that endotype-targeted therapy increases CPAP-adherence in patients who have low but continued CPAP usage. Ultimately, this strategy may improve the care and outcomes of millions of undertreated OSA patients.

Not yet recruiting24 enrollment criteria
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