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NCT ID: NCT01176279 Recruiting - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Arterial Catheter to Monitor Glycemia

CAT-GLIC
Start date: April 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The technique of blood samples extraction from the radial artery through an arterial catheter with a 3-way stopcock and automated washing with valve of fast flow is better than the one carried out through a fixed reusable arterial blood sample syringe and its manual washing because it shows a minor incidence of the complications originated from technical manipulation as infection, pseudo-aneurysm, ischemia or thrombosis of radial artery or obstruction of the catheter. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy, in terms of adverse effects, of blood samples obtention using an arterial catheter with needless connector closed system or an arterial catheter with an arterial blood sample syringe. Also a second purpose is to compare once a day (at the same time) the values of glycose blood levels between bedside glucometer determination of arterial catheter extraction and capillar puncture, and lab determination of glycose from venous puncture, in order to determinate fluctuation in glycose levels due to peripherical hypoperfusion or to vasoactive drugs received by these in-intensive care unit patients.

NCT ID: NCT01189097 Recruiting - Opioid Abuse Clinical Trials

Combined Therapy of Methadone and Dextromethrophan

DM
Start date: April 2008
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine the pharmacological effects and outcomes of DM therapy with this add-on study. And to determine the immunological changes between the baseline and the end point of the study.

NCT ID: NCT01196663 Recruiting - Clinical trials for to Evaluate the Performance of the TMS Thermometer and

Comparison of the Performance of TMS-thermometer With Standard Esophageal or Urine Bladder Thermometer

Start date: April 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This Clinical study is preformed in order to estimate the performance of the TMS thermometer and to make a final tuning of the thermometer mathematical algorithm. Body temperature of men, women and children will be measured using the TMS thermometer. Each Patient will be measured both with the TMS thermometer and with an esophageal or urinal thermometer as a reference.

NCT ID: NCT01238705 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Combined Antihypertensive Therapy and Sexual Dysfunction

Start date: April 2008
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

This randomized,active controlled study aimed to compare the effects on sexual function of treatment with combined antihypertensive drugs. The researchers hypothesize that: 1. Both felodipine-irbesartan combination and felodipine-metoprolol combination are effective in lowing blood pressure in patients with essential hypertension. 2. Felodipine-metoprolol combination induces a worse sexual function and a reduction of sex hormone,whereas felodipine-irbesartan combination does not impair sexual function and does not change hormone levels. 3. Oxidative stress decline after both combination regimens. Felodipine-irbesartan combination has a greater impact on oxidative stress indicators than felodipine-metoprolol combination.

NCT ID: NCT01490970 Recruiting - Sarcoma Database Clinical Trials

Sarcoma Database at KFSH&RC

Start date: April 2008
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Sarcoma Database

NCT ID: NCT04427189 Recruiting - Type 1 Diabetes Clinical Trials

Better Control in Pediatric and Adolescent diabeteS: Working to crEate CEnTers of Reference (SWEET- Registry)

SWEET
Start date: April 2008
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

SWEET-REGISTRY is a multi center, investigator initiated registry in patients with diabetes. SWEET' is an acronym derived from 'Better control in Pediatric and Adolescent diabeteS: Working to crEate CEnTers of Reference'. Having the vision of equal quality care for all children with diabetes the mission of SWEET is to harmonize care to optimize outcomes of children with diabetes worldwide. Initiated with support of the EU Public Health Program in 2008 the SWEET group has over 10 years of experience in creating and sustaining a high quality professional network based on agreed standards of care, criteria for certification, international guidelines and quality control. While originally focusing on the European region, SWEET is currently expanding and has received increasingly global attention, with centers across different continents including Asia, Africa, North and South-America. SWEET extracts wherever possible the data from existing data collection sources and following longitudinally unselected clinical populations of all pediatric diabetes patients as an ongoing measure of benchmarking and a quality control cycle as well as a resource for scientific studies and collaborative research. The SWEET registry was approved by the ethical committee of Hannover Medical School and is associated with the AUF DER BULT Diabetes Centre for Children and Adolescents, Hannover, Germany, which coordinates the SWEET collaboration. Each center has to meet specific entry criteria showing diabetes expertise and compliance with the International Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Diabetes (ISPAD) clinical practice guidelines. The local institutional review boards of the participating centers approved the pseudonymized data collection.

NCT ID: NCT00796146 Recruiting - Acute HIV Infection Clinical Trials

Establish and Characterize an Acute HIV Infection Cohort in a High Risk Population

Start date: April 2009
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To describe clinical, immunological, and virological characteristics of persons with acute HIV infection 1. To describe demographics and behavioral risk factors for those identified with acute HIV infection 2. To describe neurocognitive function and neuroimaging findings in acute HIV infection as well as describe immune response, HIV-1 genotypes and sequences in the cerebrospinal fluid. 3. To describe the number and characteristics of sexual contacts 4. To describe the willingness of acute HIV-infected subjects to allow the tracking of their sexual contacts for voluntary HIV counseling and testing (VCT) 5. To describe immune response, HIV-1 genotypes and sequences in the genital compartment 6. To describe T cell depletion in the gut mucosa in acute HIV infection and describe the changes in gut T cell during follow up 7. To archive samples for future investigations including determination of viral evolution, and cell-mediated and humoral immune responses in peripheral blood and mucosal compartments

NCT ID: NCT00796263 Recruiting - Acute HIV Infection Clinical Trials

Antiretroviral Therapy for Acute and Chronic HIV Infection

AAHIV
Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

This is a protocol designed to randomize subjects with acute HIV infection to receive standard HAART or mega-HAART for subject who are enrolled in SEARCH 010 study (protocol title: Establish and characterize an acute HIV infection cohort in a Thai high risk population. To describe the impact of standard HAART versus mega-HAART initiated during the acute HIV infection period on immunological and virological outcomes.

NCT ID: NCT00821314 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Overactive Bladder Syndrome

The Effect of Position on Urge Sensation in Volunteers and in Patients With Overactive Bladder Syndrome

Start date: April 2009
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational

Importance of the problem OAB is a common health problem. Milsom et al. [1] randomly selected a population from six European countries. From this population, 17% of the respondents reported having OAB symptoms with 14% reporting frequency, 9% urgency, and 6% urge incontinence. The study by Milsom et al. [1] showed that OAB adversely affected the lives of the majority (65%) of the respondents who reported OAB symptoms. Chen et al. [2] also reported that the prevalence of OAB in Taiwanese women was similar to that of Western women. In the study of Chen et al.[2], the prevalence of OAB was 18.6% for the patients; perceptions and the number of OAB condition significantly increased in the elderly women (over 65 years old, 39.3%). Apart from impairing the physical health, OAB may have a tremendous effect on psychological and social well-being. Information on the symptoms and disease severity can yield important information that often complements objective measures. Incontinence, increased urge and increased frequency of micturition affect nearly 100 million people in the western world (33 million in the US and 66 million in the European Union). These conditions are not life threatening but they seriously affect quality of life and ability to work. OAB is in some studies reported to have an incidence of up to 17 % in the western population with great consequences for the quality of life. Economic cost The total economic cost of this group of conditions is high. In 2002 the costs in the US were approximately $12.7 billion[1] (estimated to be $17 billion and €22 billion/year in 2005). Approximately 25% of this expenditure is spent on treatment (drug therapy, clinical consultation and surgery). Of those who suffer only 28% have sought help and only half of those currently receive treatment. Less than 3% regain long lasting normal control. Therefore, these costs are an under-estimate and the problem is large. Aetiology

NCT ID: NCT00835562 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Proximal Humeral Fractures

Effect of Osteosynthesis, Primary Hemi-arthroplasty, and Non-surgical Management for Fractures of the Proximal Humerus

Start date: April 2009
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Displaced four-part fractures are among the most severe injuries of the proximal humerus. The optimal treatment is disputed and published data are inadequate for evidence-based decision making. The investigators aim to: 1) compare the effect of angle-stable plate osteosynthesis and non-surgical management, 2) compare the effect of primary hemiarthroplasty with both osteosynthesis and non-surgical management, 3) study prognostic differences between 'valgus impacted' and 'classical' four-part fracture patterns. The investigators will conduct a randomised, multi-centre, clinical trial including patients from ten national shoulder units within a two year period. Patients will be randomised to non-surgical treatment, hemiarthroplasty or angle-stable plate osteosynthesis. All patients will receive a standardised three-month rehabilitation program of supervised physiotherapy. Patients will be followed at least one year and will be assessed blindly according to a standardised evaluation protocol including Constant Disability Scale, Oxford Shoulder Score, and Short Form-36.