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Active clinical trials for "Sleep Apnea Syndromes"

Results 2011-2020 of 2072

Diagnosis And Treatment of Sleep Apnea in Patient With Heart Failure

Sleep ApneaHeart Failure

DASAP-HF is an observational prospective single arm study. All patients will be treated according to the standard care followed by each center. The protocol requires enrollment of consecutive patients from each center, according to eligibility criteria. All patients must sign the Patient Informed Consent (PIC) before the enrollment in the study. All patients, after the enrollment phase, will be followed for 24 months. Approximately every 12 months a clinical follow-up procedure should be performed in each patient. A sleep study will be done in all patients at 1 month (or at 3 months) from the enrollment, in order to evaluate the performance of the algorithm as a diagnostic tool in this population (primary objective). During the 24 months follow-up period, all Adverse Events occurred in the study population will be collected (HF hospitalizations, all-cause deaths, ventricular arrhythmias, etc.). At the end of the 24 months follow-up, the incidence of clinical events will be evaluated as well as its association with the Respiratory Disturbance Index (RDI) values calculated by APNEA Scan algorithm (secondary objective).

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Detection of Airway Obstruction by Manometry in Different Sleep Stages and Comparing it to DISE...

Sleep Apnea Syndromes

Patients with OSA receive manometry measurements with Apneagraph (AG) during one night of sleep. All patients are simultaneously evaluated with polysomnography. Patients who are not eligible for CPAP therapy are additionally studied with drug-induced sleep endoscopy (DISE). The frequency and obstructions patterns in different sleep stages are assessed. In addition obstruction patterns detected with AG are compared with DISE examination in the selected cases.

Unknown status5 enrollment criteria

Heated Humidified High Flow Nasal Cannula for Children With Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Sleep ApneaObstructive

The purpose of this study is to determine whether heated humidified high flow nasal cannula (HHHFNC) is effective as a treatment of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) compared to continues positive airway pressure (CPAP) treatments in children and to compare their adherence and compliance.

Unknown status4 enrollment criteria

The Impact of Sleep Apnea Treatment on Physiology Traits in Chinese Patients With Obstructive Sleep...

Obstructive Sleep Apnea

The prevalence of OSA is 3.5~4.6% in Chinese adults. OSA leads to repetitive hypoxemia, hypercapnia, and arousal from sleep and is an independent risk factor for hypertension, stroke, coronary artery disease and congestive heart failure. CPAP is the first-line treatment for OSA. But many patients do not adhere to therapy. The upper airway(UA) anatomical abnormality is a prominent risk factor in Asian OSA patients, which might be improved by surgical strategies. However, surgery shows variable clinical effectiveness. One important reason for patients responding poorly to single treatment procedure is that multiple abnormal physiological traits contribute to OSA. High loop gain is one of the key non-anatomical risk factors. It will be useful to individualize therapy in OSA by better understanding the reversibility of increased LG, the interaction of LG and UA anatomical change as well as the condition that trigger reduction of LG. The project will test the hypothesis of 1) Elevated LG is induced in some patients and is reversible by treatment of OSA; 2) Change of LG is related to the improvement of sleep apnea; 3) An elevated LG is related to residual sleep apnea after upper airway surgery, which might be eliminated by adjunct CPAP therapy after surgery. The results would improve the efficiency of non-CPAP treatment and provide a potential combined treatment option for those patients with both elevated loop gain and anatomy risk factors in the Asian population.

Unknown status8 enrollment criteria

Fetal Outcome of Sleep Disordered Breathing During Pregnancy

Pregnant Women

Sleep disordered breathing (SDB) is a frequent disorder characterized by some combination of repeated events of partial or complete upper airway obstruction during sleep, disruption of normal ventilation, hypoxemia, and sleep fragmentation. When untreated, SDB is associated with serious cardiovascular and neurobehavioral morbidities. Many physiologic changes that occur during pregnancy may compromise the respiratory system and place women at risk for developing SDB. Indeed, snoring has been reported in up to 46% of pregnant women. Preliminary evidence suggests that SDB is associated with the hypertensive conditions of pregnancy and that oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction are mechanisms important in the development of both conditions. Moreover, early reports in animals and in humans suggest that maternal SDB may affect the developing fetus and that the intermittent hypoxia and increased sympathetic activity induced by SDB could potentially contribute to adverse maternal-fetal outcome. However, previous reports have focused on crude and non specific measures of fetal outcome such as birth weight and APGAR (Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity, Respiration) score and currently there is no data on the mechanisms underlying the adverse effect of maternal SDB on the fetus and the newborn infant. Hypothesis: SDB during pregnancy imposes a risk to the developing fetus and the newborn infant through mechanisms mediated by maternal hypoxia. Objectives: To prospectively investigate the incidence and severity of SDB during pregnancy using an objective tool, i.e., overnight polysomnography (PSG) or at-home sleep study using portable device in a large cohort of pregnant women. To examine the effect of maternal SDB on fetal and neonatal outcome. Methods: 300 women in the third trimester of a singleton uncomplicated pregnancy, who attend a low risk obstetric surveillance will be recruited. Hundred women hospitalized at the Antenatal department due to pregnancy related hypertensive disorder, intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), diabetes mellitus or premature labor will also be recruited. In addition, 200 women of a singleton uncomplicated pregnancy will be recruited during labor at the delivery room. All participants will be asked to complete a designated sleep questionnaire. Based on the questionnaires, women in the third trimester will undergo a sleep study. Medical records review will be conducted after delivery and will include information of maternal blood pressure, labor duration, route of delivery, infant birth weight and APGAR score. Placentas will be collected immediately after delivery from all women. Cord blood will be obtained immediately after delivery and will be analyzed. Post-natal neurobehavioral evaluation will be conducted. Data analysis will be performed on 4 population subgroups: (1) Sleep study proven SDB, (2) Sleep study proven non-SDB, (3) SDB per questionnaire, (4) non-SDB per questionnaire. Comparisons of fetal outcome measures according to group assignment will be performed. In addition, the association between the severity of SDB based on sleep studies (degree of hypoxemia, degree of sleep fragmentation, amount of respiratory events) and outcome measures will be performed.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

The Association Between High Risk Pregnancy and Sleep-disordered Breathing

PreeclampsiaGestational Diabetes1 more

The aim of the present study is to establish, using polysomnographic criteria and prospective nature, whether sleep apnea in pregnancy is more prevalent in women with high risk pregnancies including preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, and pre-mature contractions, and to determine the effect of sleep disordered breathing in pregnancy on fetal outcome. The investigators' hypothesis is that sleep-disordered breathing is more prevalent in women with high risk pregnancy compared to those with uncomplicated pregnancy.

Unknown status11 enrollment criteria

Analysis of the Prevalence and Characteristics of Concomitant Sleep and Headache Disorders, and...

Headache DisorderSleep Disorder1 more

There is a well-documented but poorly understood relationship between headache disorders (e.g. migraine, cluster headaches, awakening headaches, etc.) and sleep disorders. One hypothesis includes an underlying disorder known as obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) with low overnight oxygen saturations and possibly elevated carbon dioxide levels which result in awakening headache. Bruxism, or grinding of the teeth, has also been anecdotally associated with headache. The converse of these arguments is that the patient may have a primary headache disorder, for example migraine, leading to disordered sleep patterns or insomnia. The true relationship between the two, as alluded above, is unknown. The actual prevalence of the two disorders occurring simultaneously is not known. There have been several small, retrospective studies which have attempted to evaluate this relationship. One of these studies evaluated those patients diagnosed with OSA who were given the standard of care therapy - continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) - and found that headaches among these patients were improved after using CPAP. Again, this was a small, retrospective study. We propose a study whereby patients who are referred for polysomnography (PSG, or "sleep study") are consented, then surveyed on the presence or absence of headache. A brief questionnaire is followed up with a more detailed questionnaire to characterize whether this headache that the patient has is truly a headache disorder. Following the survey and PSG, the patient's sleep study parameters are evaluated to see whether there are certain correlations between what has been recorded and the particular headache disorder present. Lastly, if the patient was diagnosed with OSA and fitted with a CPAP device, the patient will be queried several weeks later to evaluate whether there was improvement or cessation of the headache disorder.

Unknown status9 enrollment criteria

Establishment of a Diagnosis and Treatment System for Information Processing Damage in Children...

Sleep ApneaObstructive

Obstructive sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS) is a common childhood sleep disorder with an incidence of 3% . Studies have confirmed that OSAHS can cause multiple systemic dysfunction in children, especially affecting cognitive function . Cognitive function is an important part of human advanced neurological activities, including neurobehavioral functions such as orientation, attention, concentration, alertness, behavior, execution, etc., as well as intelligence and verbal functions such as memory, learning, calculation, language, understanding, judgment, and logic. Reasoning and many other aspects. Impaired cognitive function often means poor academic performance, which is the most concern of parents. However, due to the limitations of cognitive assessment tools, most studies only conduct qualitative research on children's cognition, lack of quantitative research. . The underlying reason is that these studies lack the guidance of systematic intellectual theory and the support of cognitive quantitative assessment tools. At present, no one at home and abroad has systematically and comprehensively studied the cognitive impairment caused by OSAHS based on the most advanced cognitive theory. Modern cognitive science believes that cognition, including human memory, decision, reasoning, classification, and planning, is an ability that can be added to "the treatment may change." Some skill and intelligence of human beings at a certain level of cognitive activity can be trained in the execution of certain practices and in the completion of a plan. Scenes, situational features, and tasks, whether material or symbolic, play an important role in human training techniques. Therefore, evaluable and scientific cognitive function training for individuals is beneficial to the development of cognitive function, especially for the treatment training of patients with cognitive dysfunction. At present, the treatment of OSAHS is mainly for the treatment of primary disease such as oropharyngeal surgery, CPAP, etc. These treatments

Unknown status3 enrollment criteria

Using Personal Mobile Technology to Identify Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Children With Down Syndrome...

Down SyndromeObstructive Sleep Apnea1 more

This study aims to see if mobile video clips (smartphone recordings) can be used to screen children with Down syndrome to identify those at highest risk of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), so they can be prioritized for an earlier sleep study. Parents will be asked to record short video clips of their child sleeping, and then rate whether they think their child has OSA. Later, children will undergo a sleep study to compare to the ratings.

Unknown status6 enrollment criteria

Vascular Responses After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention With Stenting In Patients With Obstructive...

Coronary Artery DiseaseObstructive Sleep Apnea of Adult

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is an increasingly common chronic disorder in adults. Compared to the general population, OSA occurs more often in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), with a reported prevalence of 38% to 65%. Emerging evidence indicates OSA initiates and exacerbates coronary atherosclerosis. Moreover, several observational studies indicate the presence of OSA was associated with higher rate of restenosis and repeat revascularization (mainly attributed non-culprit lesion revascularization) after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). OSA might initiate endothelial injury by repetitive bursts of sympathetic activity that occur with apneas and hypopneas. Moreover, untreated OSA reduces endothelial repair capacity. Whether OSA could exacerbate neointimal proliferation and plaque progression in the non-culprit lesion after drug-eluting stent (DES) implantation remains less studied. The investigators aimed to evaluate neointimal proliferation and strut coverage within stent segment as well as changes of plaque volume and morphology in the non-culprit lesion by optical coherence tomography (OCT) in patients with versus without OSA at 12-month follow-up.

Unknown status19 enrollment criteria
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